Abstract

Hepcidin is a peptide hormone that targets the iron exporter ferroportin, thereby limiting iron entry into the bloodstream. It is generated in hepatocytes mainly in response to increased body iron stores or inflammatory cues. Iron stimulates expression of bone morphogenetic protein 6 (BMP6) from liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, which in turn binds to BMP receptors on hepatocytes and induces the SMAD signaling cascade for transcriptional activation of the hepcidin-encoding HAMP mRNA. SMAD signaling is also essential for inflammatory HAMP mRNA induction by the IL-6/STAT3 pathway. Herein, we utilized human Huh7 hepatoma cells and primary murine hepatocytes to assess the effects of iron perturbations on signaling to hepcidin. Iron chelation appeared to slightly impair signaling to hepcidin. Subsequent iron supplementation not only failed to reverse these effects, but drastically reduced basal HAMP mRNA and inhibited HAMP mRNA induction by BMP6 and/or IL-6. Thus, treatment of cells with excess iron inhibited basal and BMP6-mediated SMAD5 phosphorylation and induction of HAMP, ID1 and SMAD7 mRNAs in a dose-dependent manner. Iron also inhibited IL-6-mediated STAT3 phosphorylation and induction of HAMP and SOCS3 mRNAs. These responses were accompanied by induction of GCLC and HMOX1 mRNAs, known markers of oxidative stress. We conclude that hepatocellular iron overload suppresses hepcidin by inhibiting the SMAD and STAT3 signaling pathways downstream of their respective ligands.

Highlights

  • Hepcidin is a hormonal regulator of systemic iron traffic [1, 2]

  • Iron overload abrogates BMP/SMAD and IL-6/STAT signaling to hepcidin in Huh7 cells

  • We have reported that iron-depleted mice fail to mount an appropriate inflammatory induction of hepcidin and this response can be restored by iron supplementation [12]

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Summary

Introduction

Hepcidin is a hormonal regulator of systemic iron traffic [1, 2]. It is highly expressed in hepatocytes as pre-pro-hepcidin, which undergoes proteolytic processing to yield a mature peptide of 25 amino acids. Hepcidin operates by binding to the iron exporter ferroportin in target cells, such as tissue macrophages, duodenal enterocytes and hepatocytes. The binding of hepcidin directly inhibits iron efflux from ferroportin into plasma, and targets ferroportin for lysosomal degradation.

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