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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An immunoperoxidase staining technique was used for detecting three major iron-binding proteins (transferrin, ferritin, and lactoferrin) in routine histological paraffin sections of human tissue. Transferrin was found mainly in hepatocytes, a variety of epithelial and myoepithelial cells, renal tubular cells, and histiocytes. Ferritin was most readily found in histiocytes and liver cells, with weaker reactions seen in epithelial cells. Lactoferrin was found in lactating breast tissue, bronchial glands, polymorphs, and gastric and duodenal epithelial cells. The technique is potentially valuable for investigating abnormal iron states.
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PMID:Distribution of transferrin, ferritin, and lactoferrin in human tissues. 34 12

The subcellular localization of intraduodenally administered 59Fe has been studied in control, pregnant, and nonpregnant rats absorbing iron at different rates. Binding of iron to the particulate fractions of mucosal homogenates produced by centrifugation at 500, 10,000, and 100,000 X g did not vary among groups despite significant alterations in iron transport rates. Study of the 10,000 X g supernatant fluid showed that increased iron transport in iron-deficient and day 20- to 21-pregnant rats was associated with an increase in 59Fe binding to a particulate fraction of the mucosal homogenate. Although only 10 to 15% of the total mucosal 59Fe was present in the 100,000 X g supernatant in all groups, significant differences were demonstrated, among groups in the binding of iron to the three proteins present in this supernatant fraction. The proteins have been identified as ferritin, transferrin, and a protein of lower molecular weight than transferrin. Increased iron absorption was associated with a reduction in ferritin 59Fe binding and an increase in 59Fe bound to protein 3. Conversely, reduced iron absorption, was associated with increased ferritin 59Fe content and decreased protein 3 59Fe content. By studying day-21 pregnant rats 5 and 18 hr posthysterectomy it was possible to demonstrate a 12- to 18-hr delay in the intestinal mucosal protein response to alterations in the stimulus to iron absorption.
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PMID:Study of the subcellular localization of 59Fe and iron-binding proteins in the duodenal mucosa of pregnant and nonpregnant rats. 40 60

1. An epidemiological study of iron status in general practice has been undertaken. An age-sex register was established and a 10% stratified random sample (194 males and 220 females) of the patients above the age of 15 years was studied. A full blood count, serum Fe concentration, transferrin saturation and serum ferritin concentration were measured and correlated with clinical features associated with Fe deficiency. 2. The geometric mean for serum ferritin for males was 77 micrograms/l (20-196 micrograms/l) and for females 37 micrograms/l (8--177 micrograms/l). A low serum ferritin (male less than 30 micrograms/l, female less than 20 micrograms/l) in the absence of anaemia was found in fifteen males and thirty-five females. In this group forty patients had clinical features which are aetiologically associated with Fe deficiency. The incidence of similar features in a control group of thirty-three patients was seven. 3. It is suggested that this is indirect evidence that serum ferritin concentration is the most sensitive monitor of Fe status enabling the detection of pre-anaemic Fe deficiency.
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PMID:Iron status in a general practice and its relationship to morbidity. 42 82

To determine how best to assess iron status, I studied 12 young renal patients (ages 5.5 to 20 years) undergoing regular hemodialysis treatments. Iron balance was estimated by monitoring iron loss ascribable to blood loss during dialysis and diagnostic testing, and iron intake in the form of oral and intravenous iron supplements and blood transfusions. Traditional methods of evaluating iron status--measurement of hemoglobin, erythrocyte indices, reticulocyte count, iron, and transferrin--were compared with measurement of serum ferritin. The serum ferritin measurements provided superior information. In three cases this method was superior to visual assessment of bone marrow stained for iron.
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PMID:Serum ferritin compared with other indices of iron status in children and teenagers undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. 43 43

The main interest in idiopathic hemochromatosis (IH) currently centers more and more on early detection of the basic pathogenetic mechanisms of the disease, and on the prevention of organ lesions rather than therapy of the late syndrome. An understanding of the pathophysiology of this inborn error of iron metabolism, which is briefly outlined, enables the physician to motivate a still healthy potential IH patient for the simple but life-long therapeutic regimen (phlebotomy). The possible organ lesions of IH are briefly mentioned, and early recognition of arthropathy as a far from exceptional first symptom of the disease is emphasized. With regard to the detection of the latent disease, the practical value of liver biopsy, serum iron, the still debated serum ferritin, and the desferrioxamine test are discussed. Personal experience with a new and sensitive test for the screening of relatives, the cobalt absorption/excretion test, is also presented. After the recent clarification of the mode of inheritance of IH (autosomal recessive), the question arises whether heterozygote individuals, who obviously exhibit increased iron absorption, augmented transferrin saturation and an increased hepatic iron content, should also be treated prophylactically.
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PMID:[Idiopathic hemochromatosis: current problems in diagnosis and therapy]. 44 15

To evaluate the ultrastructural distribution of transferrin on the surface of L1210 ascites tumor cells, we used ferrocyanide to stain ferric iron (Prussian blue reaction) in transferrin, as well as in ferritin conjugated to antibody that was immunologically attached to the transferrin. Small deposits averaging 5 nm in diameter identified transferrin iron, whereas large cuboidal deposits averaging 50 nm in diameter stained ferritin conjugated-antibody that was bound to both transferrin and apotransferrin on the cell surface. The ability of transferrin to deliver iron to ascites tumor cells was confirmed by kinetic studies of transferrin labeled with 59Fe and 125I. These preliminary results are consistent with release of transferrin iron at the cell surface and demonstrate additional uses for ferrocyanide in ultrastructural cytochemical techniques.
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PMID:Ferrocyanide staining of transferrin and ferritin-conjugated antibody to transferrin. 44 60

Factors related to iron metabolism were determined in 20 United States Navy divers during 8 d of air saturation-excursion hyperbaric exposures. During these simulated dives progressive and correlated increases in serum ferritin and iron occurred. No significant changes were observed in bilirubin, hemoglobin, ceruloplasmin, transferrin, copper, or total iron binding capacity. The significance of the increased serum ferritin is discussed in relation to bone marrow damage and early detection of aseptic bone necrosis.
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PMID:Changes in serum ferritin and other factors associated with iron metabolism during chronic hyperbaric exposure. 45 20

The major iron-bearing cytosol components of human reticulocytes identified after incubation with 59 Fe-125I-transferrin have been studied further. Component C previously found to behave consistently as an intermediate in the iron transport pathway to haem is shown to consist entirely of ferritin. After a short pulse of labelled transferrin incubation, chase experiments showed a fall of ferritin label with time and a corresponding increase in haemoglobin-iron incorporation. There was no loss of ferritin to the culture medium. Restriction of iron uptake by reticulocytes using both p-hydroxymercuribenzoate inhibition of uptake and incubation with progressively lower saturations of iron-transferrin gave linearly related incorporation of 59Fe into ferritin and haemoglobin at all levels of iron uptake, thus negating the concept of ferritin as an 'overspill' form of reticulocyte iron. The results suggest that cytosol ferritin is an obligatory intermediate in reticulocyte iron transport.
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PMID:Ferritin as a cytosol iron transport intermediate in human reticulocytes. 46 71

Reliable methods for assessing the iron status of a population are essential for developing effective public health measures to combat iron deficiency. The hemoglobin concentration, transferrin saturation, free erythrocyte protoporphyrin, and serum ferritin are all useful but they vary widely in their specificity and sensitivity for detecting iron deficiency. In applying these laboratory parameters, the usual approach in nutritional surveys is to determine the percentage of values outside the normal range. As an alternative, a model is presented here that uses these measurements to estimate the distribution of iron stores in a population. This approach may be particularly useful for evaluating the effectiveness of iron supplementation and fortification programs.
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PMID:Assessing iron status of a population. 48 29

Ten groups of healthy infants and children from 2 months to 15 years of age were studied, each consisting of 98 to 238 subjects. In young infants whose serum ferritin values indicated ample storage iron, the concentration of hemoglobin was found to bear a significant relationship to the degree of iron saturation of transferrin. This phenomenon was evident throughout the range of transferrin saturation until 1 year of age but became undetectable or less significant from 2 to 15 years of age. We postulate that the production of hemoglobin could be influenced through a broader range of transferrin saturation in rapidly growing infants than in the older child or adult.
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PMID:Relationship between hemoglobin concentration and transferrin saturation in iron-sufficient infants. 49 47


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