Physiology (Fe, B12, etc) Flashcards

1
Q

Describe where iron is stored in the body?

A

In porphyrin ring of heme

  • hemoglobin (blood) -2500 mg
  • myoglobin (muscle) -300 mg with enzymes below
  • catalase (H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) + H2R → 2H2O + R), peroxidases (ROOR’ + electron donor (2 e-) + 2H+ → ROH + R’OH), cytochromes (inner-mitochondrial membrane bound heme-containing proteins “hemeproteins” facilitating electron transport chain -> ATP), etc => Fe participates in H&O reactions and ETC

Non-heme compounds:

  • ferritin and hemosiderin - Fe storage - 1000 mg
  • transferring (Fe transporter protein in the blood) - 4 mg
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2
Q

What is the total iron storage in males vs females?

A

Males: about 4 g total

females: about 2-3 g due to smaller iron reserves (ferritin), lower [Hb], smaller vascular volume

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3
Q

Give a quick overview of iron absorption and loss?

A
  • absorbed through duodenum
  • used by muscles (myoglobin), blood (hemoglobin)…
  • stored in liver and reticuloendothelial macrophages (in reticuloendothelial connective tissue = has special reticular fibers made of collagen, in liver, spleen and lymph nodes)
  • also stored in skin, cells lining GI and GU which slough off - > iron loss
  • iron loss due to menstruation, fetal growth, breast feeding
  • 95% of iron is reabsorbed in the body
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4
Q

Whats the difference between Fe3+ and Fe2+?

A

Fe3+ = ferric

Fe2+ = ferrous

Fe3+ (ferric) is the form consumed, but must be converted to Fe2+ (ferrous) to enter intestinal cells

notice that heme contains Fe2+

ferric reductase enzyme (gaining electrons = reduction) on brush border of enterocytes converts Fe3+ to Fe2+

Fe 2+ is then transported into cells by divalent (2+)metal transporter (DMT1)

this is different when we eat meat and fish - heme from there is absorbed directly into cell, then porphyrin ring split

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5
Q

Why does Fe2+ need transport protein in the blood?

A
  • b/c iron can be Fe2+ or Fe3+ its biological necessity is built on ability to accept and donate e- (think catalase, peroxidase, electron transport chain rxns)
  • this is great when it’s in a place reactions need to happen, but if it is simply in the blood, with O2 available, it would create free radicals (see image)
  • therefore, Fe2+ is protein bound in blood and all tissues to prevent damage
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6
Q

Outline molecular absorption of iron?

A
  • consume Fe3+ (ferrous) but not biologically active
  • Fe 3+ converted to Fe 2+ by ferric reductase
  • Fe 2+ then transported into intestinal cell by DMT (divalent metal transporter)
  • once in cell 2 choices: storage = ferritin
    • transport into blood as Fe 2+
  • if transported further into blood, ferroportin (think iron = ferro and door = porte -> control point) is the transport protein that pumps Fe2+ out of intestinal cells - control point for the amount of iron in the body
    • ​can be controlled by hemosiderin
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7
Q

How is iron cycled between dead and alive RBCs?

A

new erythrocyte (RBC) -> broken down by macrophages (usually reticuloendocytes in spleen (majority), liver, etc) ; these macrophages also maintain [Fe2+] -> if needed, Fe2+ liberated, binds to transferrin to prevent acting with O2 -> Fe2+-transferrin delivered to bone marrow - > new RBCs produced

infection, malignancy and inflammation can intefere with Fe2+ release from macrophages -> lower Fe2+ and drop in RBC production, even if enough Fe2+ in body

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8
Q

What is the tranport protein that carries Fe in the blood?

A

Transferrin - each binds 2 Fe3+ (3+)

transferrin is membrane bound protein (on enterocyte membranes), that once binds iron becomes invaginated -> clathrin coated pit with H+ pump -> pH inside drops -> Fe released

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9
Q

How is iron stored?

A

2 forms:

Ferritin - protein coat with a lot of iron atoms inside (+-4500), readily available, present in most cells -> isolates reactive iron from outside, image

Hemosiderin - less surface proteins than ferritin, in granules - higher iron concentration but released more slowly

1/3 stored in liver, 1/3 in bone marrow, rest in spleen and other tissues

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10
Q

How is iron regulated?

A

Hepcidin is central regulator

Hepcidin binds to ferroportin, which controls flow of iron out of intenstinal cells and macrophages (remember that they control iron release after digesting RBCs) - > (and into blood)

Once hepcidin binds to ferroportin, the entire complex is taken into the cell and degrated

High levels of hepcidin -> reduced Fe in the blood (ex. iron overload)

Low levels of hepcidin -> release of Fe into blood (ex. iron deficiency)

Hepcidin is produced by the liver

Factors affecting hepcidin production : iron stores, hypoxia, erythropoietin, inflammation (IL6 directly stimulates hepcidin)

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11
Q
A
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