The influence of gallium and other metal ions on the uptake of non-transferrin-bound iron by rat hepatocytes.
2006
Abstract Background. – Under conditions of iron overload non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) occurs in the circulation and is mainly cleared by the liver. Beside iron, gallium and aluminum enhance accumulation of NTBI. We try to characterize the mechanism and metal-mediated regulation of NTBI uptake using cultivated primary rat hepatocytes. Methods. – Hepatocytes from rat liver were incubated with 0.1 mg/ml transferrin (as control), with ferric ammonium citrate or other di- and trivalent metal salts and the uptake of 55 Fe-labeled Fe-diethylene triammine pentaacetate was measured. Results. – Uptake rates for iron increased from 0.3 to 2.1 pmol/mg protein per min in cells preincubated for 5 hours with 300 μM ferric ammonium citrate, to 1.7 pmol/mg protein per min with gallium and to 1.2 pmol/mg protein per min with aluminum. Maximal stimulation was obtained with 300 μM iron and 600 μM gallium. Preincubation with divalent metals was ineffective. NTBI uptake was specific for iron, partly inhibited by gallium citrate, diferric transferrin and completely inhibited by apotransferrin in control and gallium-treated cells. In iron-loaded cells, inhibition of NTBI uptake by diferric transferrin completely disappeared within 2 hours. Conclusions. – These experiments show that hepatocytes do respond to the presence of trivalent metals by an increased transport capacity to sequester these ions. The metals seem to have at least partly different mechanisms of transport stimulation.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
41
References
8
Citations
NaN
KQI