Copper Deficiency Leads to Anemia, Duodenal Hypoxia, Upregulation of HIF-2α and Altered Expression of Iron Absorption Genes in Mice

Pavle Matak(Inserm), Sara Zumerle(Délégation Paris 5), Maria Mastrogiannaki(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Souleiman El Balkhi(Hôpital Lariboisière), Stéphanie Delga(Inserm), Jacques R.R. Mathieu(Délégation Paris 5), François Canonne‐Hergaux(Inserm), Joël Poupon(Hôpital Lariboisière), Paul Sharp(King's College London), Sophie Vaulont(Délégation Paris 5), Carole Peyssonnaux(Inserm)
PLoS ONE
March 28, 2013
Cited by 63Open Access
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Abstract

Iron and copper are essential trace metals, actively absorbed from the proximal gut in a regulated fashion. Depletion of either metal can lead to anemia. In the gut, copper deficiency can affect iron absorption through modulating the activity of hephaestin - a multi-copper oxidase required for optimal iron export from enterocytes. How systemic copper status regulates iron absorption is unknown. Mice were subjected to a nutritional copper deficiency-induced anemia regime from birth and injected with copper sulphate intraperitoneally to correct the anemia. Copper deficiency resulted in anemia, increased duodenal hypoxia and Hypoxia inducible factor 2α (HIF-2α) levels, a regulator of iron absorption. HIF-2α upregulation in copper deficiency appeared to be independent of duodenal iron or copper levels and correlated with the expression of iron transporters (Ferroportin - Fpn, Divalent Metal transporter - Dmt1) and ferric reductase - Dcytb. Alleviation of copper-dependent anemia with intraperitoneal copper injection resulted in down regulation of HIF-2α-regulated iron absorption genes in the gut. Our work identifies HIF-2α as an important regulator of iron transport machinery in copper deficiency.


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