Abstract
In general, iron represents a double-edged sword in metabolism in most tissues, especially in the brain. Although the high metabolic demands of brain cells require iron as a redox-active metal for ATP-producing enzymes, the brain is highly vulnerable to the devastating consequences of excessive iron-induced oxidative stress and, as recently found, to ferroptosis as well. The blood–brain barrier (BBB) protects the brain from fluctuations in systemic iron. Under pathological conditions, especially in acute brain pathologies such as stroke, the BBB is disrupted, and iron pools from the blood gain sudden access to the brain parenchyma, which is crucial in mediating stroke-induced neurodegeneration. Each brain cell type reacts with changes in their expression of proteins involved in iron uptake, efflux, storage, and mobilization to preserve its internal iron homeostasis, with specific organelles such as mitochondria showing specialized responses. However, during ischemia, neurons are challenged with excess extracellular glutamate in the presence of high levels of extracellular iron; this causes glutamate receptor overactivation that boosts neuronal iron uptake and a subsequent overproduction of membrane peroxides. This glutamate-driven neuronal death can be attenuated by iron-chelating compounds or free radical scavenger molecules. Moreover, vascular wall rupture in hemorrhagic stroke results in the accumulation and lysis of iron-rich red blood cells at the brain parenchyma and the subsequent presence of hemoglobin and heme iron at the extracellular milieu, thereby contributing to iron-induced lipid peroxidation and cell death. This review summarizes recent progresses made in understanding the ferroptosis component underlying both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke subtypes.
Highlights
Ashley Ian Bush, The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health and The University of Melbourne, Australia Gladys Oluyemisi Latunde-Dada, King’s College London, United Kingdom
This review summarizes recent progresses made in understanding the ferroptosis component underlying both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke subtypes
In the widely reported scenario of elevated extracellular glutamate during ischemic stroke, NMDAR-induced iron import was upregulated in neurons associated with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production (Cheah et al, 2006), and system X−c and EAAT3 cystine/cysteine import are impaired by high extracellular glutamate (Conrad and Sato, 2012), compromising neuronal iron homeostasis and GSH-mediated free radical detoxification, eventually leading to an excess lipid oxidative stress that causes ferroptotic damage
Summary
Iron is essential for life; numerous proteins require iron as a cofactor for their activity. In the context of physiological iron-overload conditions found, for instance, in individuals on iron-rich diets, a significant pool of NTBI is found in the blood and might be readily absorbed by microvascular endothelial cells This effect might be relevant considering that regional differences in the brain uptake of 59Fe–NTBI versus 59Fe–TfR have been reported (Deane et al., 2004), and that 59Fe–NTBI seems to be transported faster than 59Fe–TfR into the brain parenchyma of iron-overloaded diseasefree mice. The iron storage protein FT has been found to be upregulated in epithelial cells of the choroid plexus and endothelial cells of the brain during systemic iron overload (Tripathi et al, 2017)
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