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Ferritin ferroxidase activity: a potent inhibitor of osteogenesis

Zarjou, Abolfazl and Jeney, Viktória and Arosio, Paolo and Poli, Maura and Zavaczki, Erzsébet and Balla, György and Balla, József (2010) Ferritin ferroxidase activity: a potent inhibitor of osteogenesis. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research. pp. 164-172. ISSN 0884-0431 (print), 1523-4681 (online)

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Abstract

Hemochromatosis is a known cause of osteoporosis, and iron overload has deleterious effects on bone. Although iron overload and its association with osteoporosis has long been recognized, the pathogenesis and exact role of iron have been undefined. Bone is an active tissue with constant remodeling capacity. Osteoblast (OB) development and maturation are under the influence of core binding factor α-1 (CBF-α1), which induces expression of OB-specific genes, including alkaline phosphatase, an important enzyme in early osteogenesis, and osteocalcin, a noncollagenous protein deposited within the osteoid. This study investigates the mechanism by which iron inhibits human OB activity, which in vivo may lead to decreased mineralization, osteopenia, and osteoporosis. We demonstrate that iron-provoked inhibition of OB activity is mediated by ferritin and its ferroxidase activity. We confirm this notion by using purified ferritin H-chain and ceruloplasmin, both known to possess ferroxidase activity that inhibited calcification, whereas a site-directed mutant of ferritin H-chain lacking ferroxidase activity failed to provide any inhibition. Furthermore, we are reporting that such suppression is not restricted to inhibition of calcification, but OB-specific genes such as alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin, and CBF-α1 are all downregulated by ferritin in a dose-responsive manner. This study corroborates that iron decreases mineralization and demonstrates that this suppression is provided by iron-induced upregulation of ferritin. In addition, we conclude that inhibition of OB activity, mineralization, and specific gene expression is attributed to the ferroxidase activity of ferritin. © 2010 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine / orvostudomány > RZ Other systems of medicine / orvostudomány egyéb területei
Depositing User: Dr. József Balla
Date Deposited: 21 Sep 2017 06:57
Last Modified: 21 Sep 2017 06:57
URI: http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/63175

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