Hepcidin as a therapeutic tool to limit iron overload and improve anemia in β-thalassemic mice

Sara Gardenghi(Cornell University), Pedro Luiz Ramos(Cornell University), Maria Franca Marongiu(Cornell University), Luca Melchiori(Cornell University), Laura Breda(Cornell University), Ella Guy(Cornell University), Kristen Muirhead(Cornell University), N. Jayanthi Rao(Cornell University), Cindy N. Roy(Johns Hopkins University), Nancy C. Andrews(Duke University), Elizabeta Nemeth(University of California, Los Angeles), Antonia Follenzi(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Xiuli An, Narla Mohandas, Yelena Ginzburg, Eliezer A. Rachmilewitz, Patricia J. Giardina(Cornell University), Robert W. Grady(Cornell University), Stefano Rivella(Cornell University)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
November 22, 2010
Cited by 219Open Access
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Abstract

Excessive iron absorption is one of the main features of β-thalassemia and can lead to severe morbidity and mortality. Serial analyses of β-thalassemic mice indicate that while hemoglobin levels decrease over time, the concentration of iron in the liver, spleen, and kidneys markedly increases. Iron overload is associated with low levels of hepcidin, a peptide that regulates iron metabolism by triggering degradation of ferroportin, an iron-transport protein localized on absorptive enterocytes as well as hepatocytes and macrophages. Patients with β-thalassemia also have low hepcidin levels. These observations led us to hypothesize that more iron is absorbed in β-thalassemia than is required for erythropoiesis and that increasing the concentration of hepcidin in the body of such patients might be therapeutic, limiting iron overload. Here we demonstrate that a moderate increase in expression of hepcidin in β-thalassemic mice limits iron overload, decreases formation of insoluble membrane-bound globins and reactive oxygen species, and improves anemia. Mice with increased hepcidin expression also demonstrated an increase in the lifespan of their red cells, reversal of ineffective erythropoiesis and splenomegaly, and an increase in total hemoglobin levels. These data led us to suggest that therapeutics that could increase hepcidin levels or act as hepcidin agonists might help treat the abnormal iron absorption in individuals with β-thalassemia and related disorders.


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