Iron metabolism and iron disorders revisited in the hepcidin era
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University
Abstract
Iron is biologically essential, but also potentially toxic; as such it is tightly controlled at cell and systemic levels to prevent both deficiency and overload. Iron regulatory proteins post-transcriptionally control genes encoding proteins that modulate iron uptake, recycling and storage and are themselves regulated by iron. The master regulator of systemic iron homeostasis is the liver peptide hepcidin, which controls serum iron through degradation of ferroportin in iron-absorptive enterocytes and iron-recycling macrophages. This review emphasizes the most recent findings in iron biology, deregulation of the hepcidin-ferroportin axis in iron disorders and how research results have an impact on clinical…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 46.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 168
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Hepcidin
- Ferroportin
- Iron deficiency
- Ineffective erythropoiesis
- Inflammation
- Erythropoiesis
- Endocrinology
- Hereditary hemochromatosis