scholarly journals Iron as a Therapeutic Target in HFE-Related Hemochromatosis: Usual and Novel Aspects

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivier Loréal ◽  
Thibault Cavey ◽  
François Robin ◽  
Moussa Kenawi ◽  
Pascal Guggenbuhl ◽  
...  

Genetic hemochromatosis is an iron overload disease that is mainly related to the C282Y mutation in the HFE gene. This gene controls the expression of hepcidin, a peptide secreted in plasma by the liver and regulates systemic iron distribution. Homozygous C282Y mutation induces hepcidin deficiency, leading to increased circulating transferrin saturation, and ultimately, iron accumulation in organs such as the liver, pancreas, heart, and bone. Iron in excess may induce or favor the development of complications such as cirrhosis, liver cancer, diabetes, heart failure, hypogonadism, but also complaints such as asthenia and disabling arthritis. Iron depletive treatment mainly consists of venesections that permit the removal of iron contained in red blood cells and the subsequent mobilization of stored iron in order to synthesize hemoglobin for new erythrocytes. It is highly efficient in removing excess iron and preventing most of the complications associated with excess iron in the body. However, this treatment does not target the biological mechanisms involved in the iron metabolism disturbance. New treatments based on the increase of hepcidin levels, by using hepcidin mimetics or inducers, or inhibitors of the iron export activity of ferroportin protein that is the target of hepcidin, if devoid of significant secondary effects, should be useful to better control iron parameters and symptoms, such as arthritis.

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1859-1859
Author(s):  
Patricia Aguilar-Martinez ◽  
Severine Cunat ◽  
Fabienne Becker ◽  
Francois Blanc ◽  
Marlene Nourrit ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Homozygozity for the p.Cys282Tyr (C282Y) mutation of the HFE gene is the main genotype associated with the common form of adult hereditary hemochromatosis. C282Y carriers do not usually develop iron overload, unless they have additional risk factors such as liver diseases, a dysmetabolic syndrome or an associated genetic defect. The commonest is the compound heterozygous state for C282Y and the widespread p.His63Asp (H63D) variant allele. However, a few rare HFE mutations can be found on the 6th chromosome in trans, some of which are of clinical interest to fully understand the disorder. Patients and Methods: We recently investigated four C282Y carrier patients with unusually high iron parameters, including increased levels of serum ferritin (SF), high transferrin saturation (TS) and high iron liver content measured by MRI. They were males, aged 37, 40, 42, 47 at diagnosis. Two brothers (aged 40 and 42) were referred separately. The HFE genotype, including the determination of the C282Y, H63D and S65C mutations was performed using PCR-RFLP. HFE sequencing was undertaken using the previously described SCA method (1). Sequencing of other genes (namely, HAMP, HJV/HFE2, SLC40A1, TFR2) was possibly performed in a last step using the same method. Results: We identified three rare HFE mutant alleles, two of which are undescribed, in the four studied patients. One patient bore a 13 nucleotide-deletion in exon 6 (c.[1022_1034del13], p.His341_Ala345>LeufsX119), which is predicted to lead to an abnormal, elongated protein. The two brothers had a substitution of the last nucleotide of exon 2 (c.[340G>A], p.Glu114Lys) that may modify the splicing of the 2d intron. The third patient, who bore an insertion of a A in exon 4 (c.[794dupA],p.[trp267LeufsX80]), has already been reported (1). Discussion: A vast majority of C282Y carriers will not develop iron overload and can be reassured. However, a careful step by step strategy at the clinical and genetic levels may allow to correctly identify those patients deserving further investigation. First, clinical examination and the assessment of iron parameters (SF and TS) allow identifying C282Y heterozygotes with an abnormal iron status. Once extrinsic factors such as heavy alcohol intake, virus or a dysmetabolic syndrome have been excluded, MRI is very useful to authenticate a high liver iron content. Second, HFE genotype must first exclude the presence of the H63D mutation. Compound heterozygozity for C282Y and H63D, a very widespread condition in our area, is usually associated with mild iron overload. Third, HFE sequencing can be undertaken and may identify new HFE variants as described here. The two novel mutations, a frameshift modifying the composition and the length of the C terminal end of the HFE protein and a substitution located at the last base of an exon, are likely to lead to an impaired function of HFE in association with the C282Y mutant. However, it is noteworthy that three of the four patients were diagnosed relatively late, after the 4th decade, as it is the case for C282Y homozygotes. Three further unrelated patients are currently under investigation in our laboratory for a similar clinical presentation. Finally, it can be noted that in those patients who will not have a HFE gene mutant identified, analysis of other genes implicated in iron overload must be performed to search for digenism or multigenism. None of our investigated patients had an additional gene abnormality.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 5382-5382
Author(s):  
Rodolfo D Cancado ◽  
Paulo CJL Santos ◽  
Samuel Rostelato ◽  
Cristiane T Terada ◽  
Iris Gonzales ◽  
...  

Abstract Hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) is a disorder characterized by increased intestinal iron absorption, which leads to a progressive accumulation of iron in the body. This iron overload has been associated with mutations in HFE gene (C282Y, H63D and S65C) and other genes. The objectives of this study were to assess the frequencies of functional mutations in HFE and TFR2 genes and to investigate their relationship with the iron status in a sample of blood donors. Blood donors (n=542) were recruited at the Hemocenter of the Santa Casa Hospital, Sao Paulo, Brazil. The genotypes for HFE (C282Y, H63D and S65C) TFR2 (Y250X and Q690P) gene mutations were evaluated by PCR-RFLP. The concentrations of serum iron and total iron-binding capacity (TIBC) were measured by automation system Advia®(Bayer Diagnostics) and serum ferritin by Axsym System®(Abbott Laboratories). The frequencies of HFE 282Y, HFE 63D and HFE 65C alleles were 2.1, 13.6 and 0.6%, respectively. The frequency C282Y allele (2.1%) in Brazilian blood donors is lower than that observed in blood donors from Northern Europe (5.1 to 8.2%, P<0.05). The TFR2 250X and TFR2 690P alleles were not found in these subjects. The iron status was similar between HFE genotypes in women. However, men carrying HFE 282CY genotype had higher serum ferritin and lower TIBC concentrations when compared to the HFE 282CC genotype carriers. HFE 282CY genotype was also associated with higher transferrin saturation in men who donated blood at the first time. Moreover, male donors with HFE 63DD plus 63HD genotypes had higher serum iron and transferrin saturation when compared to those with HFE 63HH genotype. A relationship between HFE CY/HH/SS haplotype and lower TIBC concentrations was also found in men. The HFE 282Y and HFE 65C alleles were rare while the HFE 63D was frequent in blood donors. The mutations in TFR2 gene were not found in this study. The HFE 282Y and HFE 63D alleles were associated with alterations on iron status only in male blood donors.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Diamandis ◽  
David Seideman ◽  
Balaskas ◽  
Anastasios Papadopoulos ◽  
Riku Honda

Abstract H63D syndrome is a phenotype of a homozygous mutation of the HFE gene H63D, which is otherwise known to cause at most mild classical hemochromatosis. H63D syndrome leads to an iron overload in the body (especially in the brain, heart, liver, skin and male gonads) in the form of non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) poisoning. Hallmark symptoms and causal factor for H63D syndrome is a mild hypotransferrinemia with transferrin saturation values >50%. H63D syndrome is an incurable multi-organ disease, leading to permanent disability. Our objective was to detect the prevalence of narcolepsy and narcolepsy with cataplexy in patients with H63D syndrome.


2000 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 162-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Rossi ◽  
John K Olynyk ◽  
Digby J Cullen ◽  
George Papadopoulos ◽  
Max Bulsara ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Women who inherit heterozygosity for the C282Y mutation of the HFE gene may have increased serum iron indices and hemoglobin and are less likely to develop iron deficiency compared with women with the wild-type genotype. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional analysis of 497 women 20–44 years of age and 830 women >51 years of age drawn from the Busselton (Australia) population study to assess the effects of the HFE genotype on serum iron and hematology indices. Results: Heterozygosity for the C282Y mutation occurred in 13.8% of the study population, comprising 11.8% C282Y wild-type heterozygotes and 2.0% C282Y/H63D compound heterozygotes. In the younger age group, C282Y wild-type women did not have significantly increased serum iron, transferrin saturation, or hemoglobin values, and were not protected from developing iron deficiency, compared with women of the same age with the wild-type genotype. Young compound heterozygous women had higher means for serum iron (25.0 vs 16.9 μmol/L; P <0.001), transferrin saturation (42.0% vs 25.6%; P <0.05), hemoglobin (139.4 vs 132.3 g/L; P <0.05), and corpuscular volume (91.1 vs 87.7 fL; P <0.05), and a higher median ferritin (53 vs 44 μg/L; P <0.05) compared with the wild-type genotype. Similar results were observed for compound heterozygotes in the >51 years age group. Conclusions: Women with the compound heterozygous HFE genotype C282Y/H63D, but not the C282Y wild-type genotype, had increased values for serum iron and transferrin saturation, and the younger age group also had increased hemoglobin values. We conclude that the compound heterozygous genotype may have a beneficial effect in protecting women from iron deficiency.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 318-321
Author(s):  
Mariana Penkova ◽  
Nadezhda Ivanova

BACKGROUND: In healthy persons, iron acquisition, trafficking and storage are strictly regulated processes due to the lack of a physiological pathway for the excretion of excess iron from the body. The liver, the duodenum and the bone marrow are involved in the regulation of iron metabolism. MATERIAL: Subject to the testing were 60 healthy volunteers who took part in clinical trials. METHODS: Case histories, physical check-up and demographic data including people’s heights and weights, laboratory studies and tests using medical equipment. RESULTS: None of the healthy persons were reported to have shown any deviation from the reference values for the serum markers of iron metabolism tested with the exception of hepcidin. CONCLUSION: In healthy persons, there was only a positive correlation between iron level and IBC, and feedback between hepcidin serum levels and transferrin saturation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Diamandis ◽  
David Seideman ◽  
Jacob S. Adams ◽  
Riku Honda ◽  
Marianne Kaufmann

Abstract H63D syndrome is a phenotype of a homozygous mutation of the HFE gene H63D, which is otherwise known to cause at most mild classical hemochromatosis. H63D syndrome leads to an iron overload in the body (especially in the brain, heart, liver, skin and male gonads) in the form of non-transferrin bound iron (NTBI) poisoning. Hallmark symptoms and causal factor for H63D syndrome is a mild hypotransferrinemia with transferrin saturation values >50%. H63D syndrome is an incurable multi-organ disease, leading to permanent disability. Our objective was to find out how many carriers of a homozygous H63D mutation develop H63D syndrome. For this purpose, we systematically evaluated the medical records of homozygous carriers of the mutation. We found the syndrome in about 10% of patients with a homozygous mutation. Since a homozygous mutation on the HFE gene H63D is relatively common, the results of our study suggest many undetected or misdiagnosed cases.


2001 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1804-1810 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A Koziol ◽  
Ngoc J Ho ◽  
Vincent J Felitti ◽  
Ernest Beutler

Abstract Background: The gene that causes most cases of hereditary hemochromatosis is designated HFE. Individuals with mutations in the HFE gene may have increased serum iron, transferrin saturation, and ferritin concentrations relative to individuals with the wild-type genotype. Methods: We generated reference centiles for percentage of transferrin saturation and serum ferritin concentrations in normal (wild-type), healthy Caucasian adults. We then examined transferrin and ferritin concentrations relative to these centiles in 81 individuals homozygous for the major hemochromatosis mutation C282Y and 438 individuals with the compound heterozygous HFE genotype C282Y/H63D. Results: Serum ferritin concentrations, but not percentage of transferrin saturation, in normal, healthy women tended to increase sharply as they progressed through menopause. Transferrin and serum ferritin centiles for normal, healthy females were lower than the corresponding centiles in normal, healthy males. C282Y homozygotes had abnormally high transferrin saturation and serum ferritin values relative to the wild types. Compound heterozygotes appeared to be a mixture of individuals with unexceptional transferrin and ferritin values and those with abnormally large values similar to the homozygotes, with equal proportions of each. Conclusions: There are age- and sex-related differences in reference centiles for the percentage of transferrin saturation and serum ferritin concentrations in normal, healthy adults. Individuals homozygous for the C282Y mutation in the HFE gene have abnormal transferrin saturation and serum ferritin values relative to the reference population; penetrance with the compound heterozygotes, as reflected by abnormal transferrin and ferritin values, is less than with the homozygotes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 44 (12) ◽  
pp. 2429-2432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Datz ◽  
Thomas Haas ◽  
Heinrich Rinner ◽  
Friedrich Sandhofer ◽  
Wolfgang Patsch ◽  
...  

Abstract Genetic hemochromatosis (GH) is the most common autosomal-recessive disorder (1 in 300 in populations of Celtic origin). Homozygosity for a C282Y mutation in the hemochromatosis (HFE) gene is the underlying defect in ∼80% of patients with GH, and 3.2–13% of Caucasians are heterozygous for this gene alteration. Because the high frequency of this mutation may result from a selection advantage, the hypothesis was tested that the C282Y mutation confers protection against iron deficiency in young women. To address this question the genotype of codon 282 was determined in a cohort of 468 unrelated female healthcare workers, ages 18–40 years. In all study participants, a complete blood count was obtained, and erythrocyte distribution width, serum iron, transferrin, transferrin saturation, and ferritin were measured. Two individuals were homozygous for the C282Y mutation, 44 were heterozygous, and 416 were homozygous for the wild-type allele. Heterozygous women had significantly higher values for hemoglobin (P = 0.006), serum iron (P = 0.013), and transferrin saturation (P = 0.006) than women homozygous for the wild-type allele. Our data provide evidence for a protective role of the C282Y mutation in the HFE gene against iron deficiency in young women and suggest that a more efficient utilization of nutritional iron may have contributed to the high prevalence of the mutation in Caucasian populations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 118-121
Author(s):  
V I Podzolkov ◽  
A E Pokrovskaya ◽  
T S Vargina ◽  
K A Oganesyan

Hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) is a disease with an autosomal recessive hereditary type, stipulated by the genetic defect that leads to a high intestinal absorption of iron and primary accumulation in the parenchymal cells of the liver and other organs. This is the most common hereditary disease among White population, the frequency is about 1 case per 250 people. The prevalence of HH is inhomogeneous, people from countries in Northern Europe, especially Scandinavian, are more susceptible to this disease. Mutations of the HFE gene account for approximately 90% of HH cases. In HH excess iron deposits mainly in the cytoplasm of parenchymal cells of various organs and tissues: in the liver, pancreas, endocrine glands, skin and joints. The clinical picture of HH is characterized by the classical triad development: cirrhosis of the liver, diabetes mellitus (DM) and hyperpigmentation. HH may also manifest itself as various endocrinopathies (hypofunction of hypophysis, adrenal glands, thyroid gland, arthropathy, cardiomyopathy). Diagnostics of HH is based on the determination of the iron metabolism values: serum iron, transferrin saturation, the amount of ferritin, the genetic tests, liver biopsy data are used to confirm the diagnosis. Despite the fact that HH is a well-studied disease, in some cases it is complicated to diagnose it. Developed posthemorrhagic anemia in a patient is one of such reasons when the iron metabolism test is not informative.


2010 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 287-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Muñoz ◽  
José Antonio García-Erce ◽  
Ángel Francisco Remacha

Main disorders of iron metabolismIncreased iron requirements, limited external supply, and increased blood loss may lead to iron deficiency (ID) and iron deficiency anaemia. In chronic inflammation, the excess of hepcidin decreases iron absorption and prevents iron recycling, resulting in hypoferraemia and iron restricted erythropoiesis, despite normal iron stores (functional iron deficiency), and finally anaemia of chronic disease (ACD), which can evolve to ACD plus true ID (ACD+ID). In contrast, low hepcidin expression may lead to hereditary haemochromatosis (HH type I, mutations of the HFE gene) and type II (mutations of the hemojuvelin and hepcidin genes). Mutations of transferrin receptor 2 lead to HH type III, whereas those of the ferroportin gene lead to HH type IV. All these syndromes are characterised by iron overload. As transferrin becomes saturated in iron overload states, non-transferrin bound iron appears. Part of this iron is highly reactive (labile plasma iron), inducing free radical formation. Free radicals are responsible for the parenchymal cell injury associated with iron overload syndromes.Role of laboratory testing in diagnosisIn iron deficiency status, laboratory tests may provide evidence of iron depletion in the body or reflect iron deficient red cell production. Increased transferrin saturation and/or ferritin levels are the main cues for further investigation of iron overload. The appropriate combination of different laboratory tests with an integrated algorithm will help to establish a correct diagnosis of iron overload, iron deficiency and anaemia.Review of treatment optionsIndications, advantages and side effects of the different options for treating iron overload (phlebotomy and iron chelators) and iron deficiency (oral or intravenous iron formulations) will be discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document