Abstract

Pulmonary iron excess is deleterious and contributes to a range of chronic and acute inflammatory diseases. Optimal lung iron concentration is maintained through dynamic regulation of iron transport and storage proteins. The iron-regulatory hormone hepcidin is also expressed in the lung. In order to better understand the interactions between iron-associated molecules and the hepcidin-ferroportin axis in lung iron balance, we examined lung physiology and inflammatory responses in two murine models of systemic iron-loading, either hepcidin knock-out (Hepc KO) or liver-specific hepcidin KO mice (Hepc KOliv), which do (Hepc KOliv) or do not (Hepc KO) express lung hepcidin. We have found that increased plasma iron in Hepc KO mice is associated with increased pulmonary iron levels, consistent with increased cellular iron uptake by pulmonary epithelial cells, together with an increase at the apical membrane of the cells of the iron exporter ferroportin, consistent with increased iron export in the alveoli. Subsequently, alveolar macrophages (AM) accumulate iron in a non-toxic form and this is associated with elevated production of ferritin. The accumulation of iron in the lung macrophages of hepcidin KO mice contrasts with splenic and hepatic macrophages which contain low iron levels as we have previously reported. Hepc KOliv mice with liver-specific hepcidin deficiency demonstrated same pulmonary iron overload profile as the Hepc KO mice, suggesting that pulmonary hepcidin is not critical in maintaining local iron homeostasis. In addition, the high iron load in the lung of Hepc KO mice does not appear to enhance acute lung inflammation or injury. Lastly, we have shown that intraperitoneal LPS injection is not associated with pulmonary hepcidin induction, despite high levels of inflammatory cytokines. However, intranasal LPS injection stimulates a hepcidin response, likely derived from AM, and alters pulmonary iron content in Hepc KO mice.

Highlights

  • Iron is essential for many cellular processes, an excess of iron can be deleterious, as it triggers the production of free radicals (Ray et al, 2012)

  • The Hepc KOliv mice demonstrated an absence of Hamp up-regulation in the lung in response to IP LPS (Figure 6E). These results suggest that pulmonary and liver hepcidin are not necessary for the regulation of iron-related genes during inflammation, FIGURE 6 | LPS responses in the lung of WT, hepcidin knock-out (Hepc KO) and Hepc KOliv mice: Hamp (A), as well as Slc40A1, Fth1, Slc11a2 + IronResponsive Elements (IREs), and Hmox1 mRNA levels relative to Ppia, analyzed by real-time PCR in the lung of WT mice (B), Hepc KO mice (C) or Hepc KOliv (D) mice IP injected for 6 h by LPS

  • We have shown that Hepc KO mice present with an accumulation of iron in the lung, and we propose that this is a result of an increase in uptake of circulating iron by epithelial cells

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Summary

Introduction

Iron is essential for many cellular processes, an excess of iron can be deleterious, as it triggers the production of free radicals (Ray et al, 2012). It is dependent on both the tightly-regulated absorption of dietary iron by duodenal enterocytes, and recycling of iron from senescent erythrocytes by macrophages, the source of most serum iron. Disorders of iron homeostasis are among the most common diseases occurring in humans. The imbalance between iron absorption and iron loss underlies conditions ranging from iron deficiency anemia to hereditary hemochromatosis (HH, iron overload diseases) (Gozzelino and Arosio, 2016; Guo et al, 2016). The molecular pathways that achieve iron balance, both at the cellular and systemic levels, have only recently been wellcharacterized

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