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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (Friedreich's ataxia)
2,098 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With rare exceptions, virtually all studied organisms from Archaea to man are dependent on iron for survival. Despite the ubiquitous distribution and abundance of iron in the biosphere, iron-dependent life must contend with the paradoxical hazards of iron deficiency and iron overload, each with its serious or fatal consequences. Homeostatic mechanisms regulating the absorption, transport, storage and mobilization of cellular iron are therefore of critical importance in iron metabolism, and a rich biology and chemistry underlie all of these mechanisms. A coherent understanding of that biology and chemistry is now rapidly emerging. In this review we will emphasize discoveries of the past decade, which have brought a revolution to the understanding of the molecular events in iron metabolism. Of central importance has been the discovery of new proteins carrying out functions previously suspected but not understood or, more interestingly, unsuspected and surprising. Parallel discoveries have delineated regulatory mechanisms controlling the expression of proteins long known--the transferrin receptor and ferritin--as well as proteins new to the scene of iron metabolism and its homeostatic control. These proteins include the iron regulatory proteins (IRPs 1 and 2), a variety of ferrireductases in yeast an mammalian cells, membrane transporters (DMT1 and ferroportin 1), a multicopper ferroxidase involved in iron export from cells (hephaestin), and regulators of mitochondrial iron balance (frataxin and MFT). Experimental models, making use of organisms from yeast through the zebrafish to rodents have asserted their power in elucidating normal iron metabolism, as well as its genetic disorders and their underlying molecular defects. Iron absorption, previously poorly understood, is now a fruitful subject for research and well on its way to detailed elucidation. The long-sought hemochromatosis gene has been found, and active research is underway to determine how its aberrant functioning results in disease that is easily controlled but lethal when untreated. A surprising connection between iron metabolism and Friedreich's ataxia has been uncovered. It is no exaggeration to say that the new understanding of iron metabolism in health and disease has been explosive, and that what is past is likely to be prologue to what is ahead.
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PMID:Chemistry and biology of eukaryotic iron metabolism. 1147 Feb 29

Iron is a vitally important element in mammalian metabolism because of its unsurpassed versatility as a biologic catalyst. However, when not appropriately shielded or when present in excess, iron plays a key role in the formation of extremely toxic oxygen radicals, which ultimately cause peroxidative damage to vital cell structures. Organisms are equipped with specific proteins designed for iron acquisition, export, transport, and storage as well as with sophisticated mechanisms that maintain the intracellular labile iron pool at an appropriate level. These systems normally tightly control iron homeostasis but their failure can lead to iron deficiency or iron overload and their clinical consequences. This review describes several rare iron loading conditions caused by genetic defects in some of the proteins involved in iron metabolism. A dramatic decrease in the synthesis of the plasma iron transport protein, transferrin, leads to a massive accumulation of iron in nonhematopoietic tissues but virtually no iron is available for erythropoiesis. Humans and mice with hypotransferrinemia have a remarkably similar phenotype. Homozygous defects in a recently identified gene encoding transferrin receptor 2 lead to iron overload (hemochromatosis type 3) with symptoms similar to those seen in patients with HFE-associated hereditary hemochromatosis (hemochromatosis type 1). Transferrin receptor 2 is primarily expressed in the liver but it is unclear how mutant forms cause iron overload. Mutations in the gene encoding the iron exporter, ferroportin 1, cause iron overload characterized by iron accumulation in macrophages yet normal plasma iron levels. Plasma iron, together with dominant inheritance, discriminates iron overload due to ferroportin mutations (hemochromatosis type 4) from hemochromatosis type 1. Heme oxygenase 1 is essential for the catabolism of heme and in the recycling of hemoglobin iron in macrophages. Homozygous heme oxygenase 1 deletion in mice leads to a paradoxical accumulation of nonheme iron in macrophages, hepatocytes, and many other cells and is associated with low plasma iron levels, anemia, endothelial cell damage, and decreased resistance to oxidative stress. A similar phenotype occurred in a child with severe heme oxygenase 1 deficiency. Recently, a mutation in the L-subunit of ferritin has been described that causes the formation of aberrant L-ferritin with an altered C-terminus. Individuals with this mutation in one allele of L-ferritin have abnormal aggregates of ferritin and iron in the brain, primarily in the globus pallidus. Patients with this dominantly inherited late-onset disease present with symptoms of extrapyramidal dysfunction. Mice with a targeted disruption of a gene for iron regulatory protein 2 (IRP2), a translational repressor of ferritin, misregulate iron metabolism in the intestinal mucosa and the central nervous system. Significant amounts of ferritin and iron accumulate in white matter tracts and nuclei, and adult IRP2-deficient mice develop a movement disorder consisting of ataxia, bradykinesia, and tremor. Mutations in the frataxin gene are responsible for Friedreich ataxia, the most common of the inherited ataxias. Frataxin appears to regulate mitochondrial iron (or iron-sulfur cluster) export and the neurologic and cardiac manifestations of Friedreich ataxia are due to iron-mediated mitochondrial toxicity. Finally, patients with Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome, an autosomal recessive, progressive neurodegenerative disorder, have mutations in a novel pantothenate kinase gene (PANK2). The cardinal feature of this extrapyramidal disease is pathologic iron accumulation in the globus pallidus. The defect in PANK2 is predicted to cause the accumulation of cysteine, which binds iron and causes oxidative stress in the iron-rich globus pallidus.
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PMID:Rare causes of hereditary iron overload. 1238

Friedreich's ataxia is a cardio- and neurodegenerative disease due to decreased expression of the mitochondrial protein, frataxin. This defect results in mitochondrial iron-overload, and in this review, we discuss the mechanisms that lead to this iron accumulation. Using a conditional knockout mouse model where frataxin is deleted in the heart, it has been shown that this mutation leads to transferrin receptor-1 upregulation, resulting in increased iron uptake from transferrin. There is also marked downregulation of ferritin that is required for iron storage and decreased expression of the iron exporter, ferroportin 1, leading to decreased cellular iron efflux. The increased mitochondrial iron uptake is facilitated by upregulation of the mitochondrial iron transporter, mitoferrin 2. This stimulation of iron uptake probably attempts to rescue the deficit in mitochondrial iron metabolism that is due to downregulation of mitochondrial iron utilization, namely, heme and iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) synthesis and also iron storage (mitochondrial ferritin). The resultant decrease in heme and ISC synthesis means heme and ISCs are not exiting the mitochondrion for cytosolic use. Hence, increased mitochondrial iron uptake coupled with decreased utilization and release leads to mitochondrial iron-loading. More generally, disturbance of mitochondrial iron utilization in other diseases probably also results in similar compensatory alterations.
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PMID:The ins and outs of mitochondrial iron-loading: the metabolic defect in Friedreich's ataxia. 1999 98