1. Academic Validation
  2. Mitoferrin is essential for erythroid iron assimilation

Mitoferrin is essential for erythroid iron assimilation

  • Nature. 2006 Mar 2;440(7080):96-100. doi: 10.1038/nature04512.
George C Shaw 1 John J Cope Liangtao Li Kenneth Corson Candace Hersey Gabriele E Ackermann Babette Gwynn Amy J Lambert Rebecca A Wingert David Traver Nikolaus S Trede Bruce A Barut Yi Zhou Emmanuel Minet Adriana Donovan Alison Brownlie Rena Balzan Mitchell J Weiss Luanne L Peters Jerry Kaplan Leonard I Zon Barry H Paw
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Hematology, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Abstract

Iron has a fundamental role in many metabolic processes, including electron transport, deoxyribonucleotide synthesis, oxygen transport and many essential redox reactions involving haemoproteins and Fe-S cluster proteins. Defective iron homeostasis results in either iron deficiency or iron overload. Precise regulation of iron transport in mitochondria is essential for haem biosynthesis, haemoglobin production and Fe-S cluster protein assembly during red cell development. Here we describe a zebrafish mutant, frascati (frs), that shows profound hypochromic anaemia and erythroid maturation arrest owing to defects in mitochondrial iron uptake. Through positional cloning, we show that the gene mutated in the frs mutant is a member of the vertebrate mitochondrial solute carrier family (SLC25) that we call mitoferrin (mfrn). mfrn is highly expressed in fetal and adult haematopoietic tissues of zebrafish and mouse. Erythroblasts generated from murine embryonic stem cells null for Mfrn (also known as Slc25a37) show maturation arrest with severely impaired incorporation of 55Fe into haem. Disruption of the yeast mfrn orthologues, MRS3 and MRS4, causes defects in iron metabolism and mitochondrial Fe-S cluster biogenesis. Murine Mfrn rescues the defects in frs zebrafish, and zebrafish mfrn complements the yeast mutant, indicating that the function of the gene may be highly conserved. Our data show that mfrn functions as the principal mitochondrial iron importer essential for haem biosynthesis in vertebrate erythroblasts.

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