Abstract
Cardiac function requires continuous high levels of energy, and so iron, a critical player in mitochondrial respiration, is an important component of the heart. Hearts from 57Fe-enriched mice were evaluated by Mössbauer spectroscopy. Spectra consisted of a sextet and two quadrupole doublets. One doublet was due to residual blood, whereas the other was due to [Fe4S4]2+ clusters and low-spin FeII hemes, most of which were associated with mitochondrial respiration. The sextet was due to ferritin; there was no evidence of hemosiderin, a ferritin decomposition product. Iron from ferritin was nearly absent in young hearts, but increased steadily with age. EPR spectra exhibited signals similar to those of brain, liver, and human cells. No age-dependent EPR trends were apparent. Hearts from HFE-/- mice with hemochromatosis contained slightly more iron overall than controls, including more ferritin and less mitochondrial iron; these differences typify slightly older hearts, perhaps reflecting the burden due to this disease. HFE-/- livers were overloaded with ferritin but had low mitochondrial iron levels. IRP2-/- hearts contained less ferritin than controls but normal levels of mitochondrial iron. Hearts of young mice born to an iron-deficient mother contained normal levels of mitochondrial iron and no ferritin; the heart from the mother contained low ferritin and normal levels of mitochondrial iron. High-spin FeII ions were nearly undetectable in heart samples; these were evident in brains, livers, and human cells. Previous Mössbauer spectra of unenriched diseased human hearts lacked mitochondrial and blood doublets and included hemosiderin features. This suggests degradation of iron-containing species during sample preparation.
Highlights
From an early stage of fetal development until the end of life, the heart functions unceasingly to pump blood throughout the body
Much of the iron that enters cardiomyocytes is used to build iron-sulfur clusters (ISCs)3 and heme centers many of which are installed into mitochondrial respiratory complexes and respiration-related proteins
We investigate hearts from HFEϪ/Ϫ mice with hemochromatosis, hearts from IRP2Ϫ/Ϫ mice, and hearts from an irondeficient mouse and her offspring
Summary
We wanted to characterize the iron content of healthy mammalian hearts at different developmental stages, and used MB spectroscopy as our primary tool. EPR spectra were collected (Fig. 4) on different heart samples that had been homogenized and packed into EPR tubes by centrifugation. The average iron concentration in the healthy heart samples (with blood excluded) was 400 Ϯ 200 M (n ϭ 11), depending on age. ND 45 Ϯ 1 36 Ϯ 0.4 39 Ϯ 1 40 Ϯ 10 40 Ϯ 2 48 Ϯ 0.3 58 Ϯ 1 29 Ϯ 4 60 Ϯ 30 35 Ϯ 2 36 Ϯ 1
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