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)

Anthracyclines are potent anticancer agents, but their use is limited by cardiotoxicity at high cumulative doses. The mechanisms involved in anthracycline-mediated cardiotoxicity are still poorly understood, but numerous investigations have indicated a role for iron in this process. Our previous studies using neoplastic and myocardial cells showed that anthracyclines inhibit iron mobilization from the iron storage protein, ferritin, resulting in marked accumulation of ferritin-iron. Although the process of ferritin-iron mobilization is little understood, catabolism of ferritin by lysosomes may be a likely mechanism. Because anthracyclines have been shown to accumulate in lysosomes, this latter organelle may be a potential target for these drugs. The present study demonstrated, using native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-59Fe autoradiography, that ferritin-59Fe mobilization is an energy-dependent process that also requires protein synthesis. Depression of lysosomal activity via the enzyme inhibitors E64d [(2S,3S)-trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido-2-methylbutane ethyl ester] and leupeptin or the lysosomotropic agents ammonium chloride, chloroquine, and methylamine resulted in a 3- to 5-fold increase in 59Feferritin accumulation compared with control cells. In addition, the proteasome inhibitors N-benzoyloxycarbonyl (Z)-Leu-Leuleucinal (MG132) and lactacystin also significantly increased 59Fe-ferritin levels compared with control cells. These effects of lysosomotropic agents or inhibitors of lysosomal activity were comparable with that observed with the anthracycline doxorubicin. Collectively, our study indicates a role for lysosomes and proteasomes in ferritin-iron mobilization, and this pathway is dependent on metabolic energy and protein synthesis. Furthermore, the lysosome/proteasome pathway may be a novel anthracycline target, inhibiting iron mobilization from ferritin that is essential for vital iron-requiring processes such as DNA synthesis.
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PMID:Examination of the mechanism(s) involved in doxorubicin-mediated iron accumulation in ferritin: studies using metabolic inhibitors, protein synthesis inhibitors, and lysosomotropic agents. 1472 50

The cardiotoxicity induced by the anticancer anthracycline doxorubicin (DOX) is attributed to reactions between iron and reactive oxygen species (ROS) that lead to oxidative damage. We found that DOX forms ROS in H9c2 cardiomyocytes, as shown by dichlorodihydrofluorescein oxidation and the expression of stress-responsive genes such as catalase or aldose reductase. DOX also increased ferritin levels in these cells, particularly the H subunit. A considerable increase in ferritin mRNA levels showed that DOX acted at transcriptional level, but an additional potential mechanism was identified as the down-regulation of iron regulatory protein-2, post-transcriptional inhibitor of ferritin synthesis. Pretreatment with DOX protected H9c2 cells against the damage induced by subsequent exposure to ferric ammonium citrate, and experiments with (55)Fe revealed that the protection was due to the deposition of iron in ferritin. Cytoprotection was also observed when DOX was replaced by glucose/glucose oxidase, a source of H(2)O(2), thus suggesting that DOX increases ferritin synthesis through the action of ROS. This concept was supported by three more lines of evidence. (i) DOX-induced ferritin synthesis was blocked by N-acetylcysteine, a scavenger of ROS. (ii) Mitoxantrone, a ROS-forming analogue, similarly induced ferritin expression and protected the cells against iron toxicity. (iii) 5-Iminodaunorubicin, an analogue lacking ROS-forming activity, did not induce ferritin synthesis or protect the cells against iron toxicity. These results characterize a paradoxically beneficial link between anthracycline-derived ROS, increased ferritin synthesis, and resistance to iron-mediated damage. The role of iron and ROS in anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity may, therefore, be more complex than previously believed.
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PMID:Doxorubicin paradoxically protects cardiomyocytes against iron-mediated toxicity: role of reactive oxygen species and ferritin. 1473 95

The cellular uptake and storage of iron have to be tightly regulated in order to provide iron for essential cellular functions while preventing the iron-catalysed generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In contrast to cells in other organs, little is known about the regulation of iron metabolism in brain cells, particularly in astrocytes. To investigate the regulation of iron metabolism in astrocytes we have used primary astrocyte cultures from the brains of newborn rats. After application of ferric ammonium citrate (FAC), cultured astrocytes accumulated iron in a time- (0-48 h) and concentration-dependent (0.01-1 mm) manner. This accumulation was prevented if FAC was applied in combination with the iron-chelator deferoxamine (DFX). Application of FAC to astrocyte cultures caused a strong increase in the cellular content of the iron storage protein ferritin and a decrease in the amount of transferrin receptor (TfR), which is involved in the transferrin-mediated uptake of iron into cells. In contrast, application of DFX strongly increased the level of TfR. Both up-regulation of ferritin content by iron application and up-regulation of TfR content by DFX were prevented by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX). During incubation of astrocytes with FAC, a mild and transient increase in the extracellular activity of the cytosolic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase and in the concentration of intracellular ROS was observed. In contrast, prevention of protein synthesis by CHX during incubation with FAC resulted in significantly more cell loss and a persistent and intense increase in the production of intracellular ROS. These results demonstrate that both iron accumulation and deprivation modulate the synthesis of ferritin and TfR in astrocytes and that protein synthesis is required to prevent iron-mediated toxicity in astrocytes.
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PMID:Iron accumulation, iron-mediated toxicity and altered levels of ferritin and transferrin receptor in cultured astrocytes during incubation with ferric ammonium citrate. 1500 75

Ferritin utilizes ferroxidase activity to incorporate iron. Iron uptake kinetics of bovine spleen apoferritin (H: L = 1 : 1.1) were compared with those of recombinant H chain ferritin and L chain ferritin homopolymers. H chain ferritin homopolymer showed an iron uptake rate identical to bovine spleen apoferritin (0.19 and 0.21 mmol/min/micromol of protein, respectively), and both showed iron concentration-dependent uptake. In contrast, the L chain homopolymer, which lacks ferroxidase, did not incorporate iron and showed the same level of iron autoxidation in the absence of ferritin. Bovine spleen apoferritin was shown to have two iron concentration-dependent uptake pathways over a range of 0.02-0.25 mM ferrous ammonium sulfate (FAS) by an Eadie-Scatchard plot (v/[FAS] versus v), whereas the H chain ferritin homopolymer was found to have only one pathway. Of the two Km values found in bovine spleen apoferritin, the lower mean Km value was 9.0 microM, while that of the H chain homopolymer was 11.0 microM. H chain ferritin homopolymer reached a saturating iron uptake rate at 0.1 mM FAS, while bovine spleen apoferritin incorporated more iron even at 0.25 mM FAS. These results suggest that the intrinsic ferroxidase of ferritin plays a significant role in iron uptake, and the L chain cooperates with the H chain to increase iron uptake.
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PMID:Kinetic analysis of bovine spleen apoferritin and recombinant H and L chain homopolymers: iron uptake suggests early stage H chain ferroxidase activity and second stage L chain cooperation. 1508 39

The development of an enhanced chemiluminescence detection method for the rapid detection of haptoglobin phenotyping after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is described in this paper. The enhanced chemiluminescence detection is based upon chemiluminescent reaction between luminol and hydrogen peroxide. Increased sensitivity and dynamic range are achieved by employing ammonium persulfate to enhance the chemiluminescence signal. Detection of haptoglobin phenotypes in human blood serum was easily achieved even without the addition of hemoglobin. Different polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis results were found between pure serum and hemoglobin-supplemented serum. Applying the suggested enhanced chemiluminescence detection, the original combining forms of haptoglobin and hemoglobin can be detected. The linear range of haptoglobin is 0.1-13.3 microg/mL, with a detection limit of 1.21 ng (sample loading volume 15 microL). Other proteins, such as catalase and ferritin, can also be detected using enhanced chemiluminescence detection. All detections after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were completed within 15 min. The proposed detection is very fast, compared to traditional methods using staining detection (minutes versus hours).
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PMID:Chemiluminescent image detection of haptoglobin phenotyping after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 1516 74

The mechanisms behind the pathology of prion diseases are still unknown, but accumulating evidence suggests oxidative impairment along with metal imbalances in scrapie-infected brains. In this study, we have investigated iron-induced oxidative stress in scrapie-infected mouse neuroblastoma N2a (ScN2a) cells. Uninfected N2a and ScN2a cells were treated with ferric ammonium citrate (FAC) for 1-16 h, and the levels of labile iron pool (LIP), the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), cell viability and ferritin protein levels were measured. The increase in LIP in N2a cells was transient with a quick recovery to normal levels within 4h accompanied by a moderate increase of formation of ROS after 3h followed by the decrease to the basal level. In ScN2a cells, the increase in LIP was lower, but the process of recovery was prolonged and accompanied by high ROS formation and decreased cell viability. Ferritin protein levels were significantly lower in ScN2a cells than in wild-type cells in all iron treatments. These results suggest that ScN2a cells are more sensitive to iron treatment as compared to wild-type cells with respect to ROS formation and cell viability, and that ferritin deficiency in infected cells may contribute to iron-induced oxidative stress in scrapie-infected cells.
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PMID:Increased iron-induced oxidative stress and toxicity in scrapie-infected neuroblastoma cells. 1592 93

Ferritin, a ubiquitously distributed iron storage protein, has been reported to interact with microtubules in vitro (Hasan et al., 2005, FEBS journal 272:822-831). Here, we demonstrate that ferritin binds with the microtubules in an oligomeric form and that the microtubule-bound ferritin contains more than two-fold amount of iron compared to the unbound ferritin fraction in vitro. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy showed that a significant fraction of the ferritin molecules colocalized with the microtubules as oligomers in a wide variety of cell lines. These findings are consistent with the immediate oligomerization of rhodamine-labeled ferritin, microinjected in living human hepatoma cells. Ferritin oligomers were dynamic in the cytoplasm, and an anti-microtubule drug significantly inhibited their intracellular movement. Treatment of cells with an iron donor, ferric ammonium citrate, remarkably increased the number of cells containing ferritin oligomers. On the other hand, when the cells, such as mouse neuroblastoma cells, were deprived of iron, ferritin oligomers were localized in the microtubule dense, neurite shafts, but were disappeared from the microtubule deficient neurite tips. These data indicate that the microtubules provide a scaffold for the cytoplasmic distribution and transport of the iron-rich ferritin and implicate the role of microtubules in iron metabolism.
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PMID:Ferritin forms dynamic oligomers to associate with microtubules in vivo: implication for the role of microtubules in iron metabolism. 1660 54

The discovery of iron-responsive elements (IREs), along with the identification of iron regulatory proteins (IRP1, IRP2), has provided a molecular basis for our current understanding of the remarkable post-transcriptional regulation of intracellular iron homeostasis. In iron-depleted conditions, IRPs bind to IREs present in the 5'-UTR of ferritin mRNA and the 3'-UTR of transferrin receptor (TfR) mRNA. Such binding blocks the translation of ferritin, the iron storage protein, and stabilizes TfR mRNA, whereas the opposite scenario develops when iron in the intracellular transit pool is plentiful. Nitrogen monoxide (commonly designated nitric oxide; NO), a gaseous molecule involved in numerous functions, is known to affect cellular iron metabolism via the IRP/IRE system. We previously demonstrated that the oxidized form of NO, NO(+), causes IRP2 degradation that is associated with an increase in ferritin synthesis [Kim, S & Ponka, P (2002) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA99, 12214-12219]. Here we report that sodium nitroprusside (SNP), an NO(+) donor, causes a dramatic and rapid increase in ferritin synthesis that initially occurs without changes in the RNA-binding activities of IRPs. Moreover, we demonstrate that the translational efficiency of ferritin mRNA is significantly higher in cells treated with SNP compared with those incubated with ferric ammonium citrate, an iron donor. Importantly, we also provide definitive evidence that the iron moiety of SNP is not responsible for such changes. These results indicate that SNP-mediated increase in ferritin synthesis is, in part, due to an IRP-independent and NO(+)-dependent post-transcriptional, regulatory mechanism.
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PMID:Iron regulatory protein-independent regulation of ferritin synthesis by nitrogen monoxide. 1691 29

A quantitative ELISA was developed for bovine milk ferritin with an assay limit of 0.16 ng/mL of bovine spleen ferritin. Ferritin-binding activity was detected in bovine milk samples, and this binding activity was inhibited by increasing ionic strength with the addition of 0.5 M (NH4)2SO4. Heat treatment (60 degrees C, 20 min) of bovine milk in the presence of 0.5 M (NH4)2SO4 resulted in a 15 to 58% increase in ferritin concentrations compared with untreated samples. Although the recovery of bovine spleen ferritin added to milk was still low (55 to 90%), even in the presence of increased ionic strength with 0.5 M (NH4)2SO4, recovery was improved by heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 20 min (92 to 95%). Milk ferritin concentrations in 30 milk samples from quarters of 25 cows with mastitis (mean +/- SE: 134.2 +/- 28.7 ng/mL) were significantly higher than those in 17 quarter milk samples from 17 noninfected lactating cows (7.2 +/- 1.2 ng/mL), suggesting that bovine milk contains putative ferritin-binding proteins that inhibit immunoassay for milk ferritin and that bovine milk ferritin is an indicator of IMI.
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PMID:Technical note: measurement of ferritin in bovine milk and its clinical significance. 1696 59

Despite recurrent exposure to zinc through inhalation of ambient air pollution particles, relatively little information is known about the homeostasis of this metal in respiratory epithelial cells. We describe zinc uptake and release by respiratory epithelial cells and test the postulate that Zn(2+) transport interacts with iron homeostasis in these same cells. Zn(2+) uptake after 4 and 8 h of exposure to zinc sulfate was concentration- and time-dependent. A majority of Zn(2+) release occurred in the 4 h immediately following cell exposure to ZnSO(4). Regarding metal importers, mRNA for Zip1 and Zip2 showed no change after respiratory epithelial cell exposure to zinc while mRNA for divalent metal transporter (DMT)1 increased. Western blot assay for DMT1 protein supported an elevated expression of this transport protein following zinc exposure. RT-PCR confirmed mRNA for the metal exporters ZnT1 and ZnT4 with the former increasing after ZnSO(4). Cell concentrations of ferritin increased with zinc exposure while oxidative stress, measured as lipid peroxides, was decreased supporting an anti-oxidant function for Zn(2+). Increased DMT1 expression, following pre-incubations of respiratory epithelial cells with TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and endotoxin, was associated with significantly decreased intracellular zinc transport. Finally, incubations of respiratory epithelial cells with both zinc sulfate and ferric ammonium citrate resulted in elevated intracellular concentrations of both metals. We conclude that exposure to zinc increases iron uptake by respiratory epithelial cells. Elevations in cell iron can possibly affect an increased expression of DMT1 and ferritin which function to diminish oxidative stress. Comparable to other metal exposures, changes in iron homeostasis may contribute to the biological effects of zinc in specific cells and tissues.
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PMID:Zinc transport by respiratory epithelial cells and interaction with iron homeostasis. 1930 86


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