Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/6509
Title: Strong iron demand during hypoxia-induced erythropoiesis is associated with down-regulation of iron-related proteins and myoglobin in human skeletal muscle
Authors: Robach, Paul
Cairo, Gaetano
Gelfi, Cecilia
Bernuzzi, Francesca
Pilegaard, Henriette
Vigano, Agnese
Santambrogio, Paolo
Cerretelli, Paolo
Calbet, Jose A. L. 
Moutereau, Stéphane
Lundby, Carsten
UNESCO Clasification: 2411 Fisiología humana
Keywords: Blood
Iron
Altitude
Issue Date: 2007
Journal: Blood 
Abstract: Iron is essential for oxygen transport because it is incorporated in the heme of the oxygen-binding proteins hemoglobin and myoglobin. An interaction between iron homeostasis and oxygen regulation is further suggested during hypoxia, in which hemoglobin and myoglobin syntheses have been reported to increase. This study gives new insights into the changes in iron content and iron-oxygen interactions during enhanced erythropoiesis by simultaneously analyzing blood and muscle samples in humans exposed to 7 to 9 days of high altitude hypoxia (HA). HA up-regulates iron acquisition by erythroid cells, mobilizes body iron, and increases hemoglobin concentration. However, contrary to our hypothesis that muscle iron proteins and myoglobin would also be up-regulated during HA, this study shows that HA lowers myoglobin expression by 35% and down-regulates iron-related proteins in skeletal muscle, as evidenced by decreases in L-ferritin (43%), transferrin receptor (TfR; 50%), and total iron content (37%). This parallel decrease in L-ferritin and TfR in HA occurs independently of increased hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) mRNA levels and unchanged binding activity of iron regulatory proteins, but concurrently with increased ferroportin mRNA levels, suggesting enhanced iron export. Thus, in HA, the elevated iron requirement associated with enhanced erythropoiesis presumably elicits iron mobilization and myoglobin down-modulation, suggesting an altered muscle oxygen homeostasis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/6509
ISSN: 0006-4971
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2006-08-040006
Source: Blood[ISSN 0006-4971],v. 109 (11), p. 4724-4731
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