Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Both iron and the major iron-binding protein ferritin are enriched in oligodendrocytes compared with astrocytes and neurons, but their functional role remains to be determined. Progressive hypoxia dramatically induces the synthesis of ferritin in both neonatal rat oligodendrocytes and a human oligodendroglioma cell line. We now report that the release of iron from either transferrin or ferritin-bound iron, after a decrease in intracellular pH, also leads to the induction of ferritin synthesis. The hypoxic induction of ferritin synthesis can be blocked either with iron chelators (deferoxamine or phenanthroline) or by preventing intracellular acidification (which is required for the release of transferrin-bound iron) with weak base treatment (ammonium chloride and amantadine). Two sources of exogenous iron (hemin and ferric ammonium citrate) were able to stimulate ferritin synthesis in both oligodendrocytes and HOG in the absence of hypoxia. This was not additive to the hypoxic stimulation, suggesting a common mechanism. We also show that ferritin induction may require intracellular free radical formation because hypoxia-mediated ferritin synthesis can be further enhanced by cotreatment with hydrogen peroxide. This in turn was blocked by the addition of exogenous catalase to the culture medium. Our data suggest that disruption of intracellular free iron homeostasis is an early event in hypoxic oligodendrocytes and that ferritin may serve as an iron sequestrator and antioxidant to protect cells from subsequent iron-catalyzed lipid peroxidation injury.
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PMID:Hypoxia alters iron homeostasis and induces ferritin synthesis in oligodendrocytes. 776 25

Neonatal (3 day old) rat oligodendrocytes grown in monolayer culture and exposed to increasingly hypoxic culture conditions showed increased Tran35S-label incorporation into a 22-kDa protein. Reoxygenation of cultures reversed the synthesis of the protein. Amino acid sequencing of a peptide derived from the purified protein revealed a 13 amino acid sequence with complete identity to a human heavy chain subunit of ferritin. This was confirmed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, immunoprecipitation, and western blot analysis with antiferritin antibody. In addition, hypoxia was able to induce the synthesis of ferritin in a cell line derived from human oligodendroglioma cells but not in astrocytes or neurons. Actinomycin D (1-15 micrograms/ml) treatment did not block the hypoxic induction of ferritin synthesis, whereas cycloheximide (1 microM) gave complete inhibition. Northern blot analysis showed that ferritin mRNA levels remained unchanged in both control and hypoxic oligodendrocytes and human oligodendroglioma cells, suggesting that the synthesis of ferritin was translationally rather than transcriptionally regulated by hypoxia. In neither oligodendrocytes nor the oligodendroglioma was there any cross-reaction with an antibody to alpha B-crystallin, the 22-kDa protein induced in astrocytes by various types of stress, further suggesting the specificity of hypoxic induction of ferritin in oligodendrocytes.
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PMID:Hypoxia specifically and reversibly induces the synthesis of ferritin in oligodendrocytes and human oligodendrogliomas. 793 1