Several factors affect the autoimmune response, including iron-dependent modulation of T cells. Hemopexin is the plasma protein with the highest binding affinity to heme. It mediates heme-iron recovery in the liver, thus controlling heme-iron availability in peripheral cells. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of hemopexin in the progress of an autoimmune response. To this end, we chose a mouse model of mercury-induced autoimmunity and evaluated the susceptibility of hemopexin-null mice to mercury treatment compared with wild-type controls. In this study we show that lack of hemopexin dampens mercury-induced autoimmune responses in mice. Hemopexin-null mice produced fewer antinuclear autoantibodies and had reduced deposits of immune complexes in the kidney after mercuric chloride treatment compared with wild-type mice. These features were associated with a reduction in activated T cells and lower absolute B cell number in spleen and impaired IgG1 and IgG2a production. In contrast, in hemopexin-null mice the response to OVA/CFA immunization was maintained. In addition, hemopexin-null mice had reduced transferrin receptor 1 expression in T cells, possibly due to the increase in heme-derived iron. Interestingly, CD4(+)T cells isolated from mercury-treated hemopexin-null mice show reduced IFN-gamma-dependent STAT1 phosphorylation compared with that of wild-type mice. Our data suggest that hemopexin, by controlling heme-iron availability in lymphocytes, modulates responsiveness to IFN-gamma and, hence, autoimmune responses.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.181.3.1937 | DOI Listing |
Biometals
June 2019
School of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Kansas, USA.
Studies with patients, animal models of human disease and hemopexin null mice have shown that the heme-binding protein hemopexin is vital for the protection of a variety of cell types and tissues against heme toxicity. The presence of hemopexin in all biological fluids examined to date indicates wide roles in abrogating heme toxicity in human tissues; and, thus, is clinically relevant. Heme-hemopexin endocytosis leads to coordinated trafficking of heme, iron and copper as heme traffics from endosomes to heme oxygenases (HOs) in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and to the nucleus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2017
Molecular Biotechnology Center, University of Torino, Torino, Italy ; Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Health Sciences, University of Torino, Torino, Italy.
Purpose: The body concentration of iron is regulated by a fine equilibrium between absorption and losses of iron. Iron can be absorbed from diet as inorganic iron or as heme. Hemopexin is an acute phase protein that limits iron access to microorganisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
April 2011
Department of Pharmacology, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil.
Rationale: The reduction of neutrophil migration to the bacterial focus is associated with poor outcome in sepsis.
Objectives: The objective of this study was to identify soluble substances in the blood of septic mice that inhibit neutrophil migration.
Methods: A pool of serum obtained from mice 2 hours after the induction of severe sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture inhibited the neutrophil migration.
J Immunol
August 2008
Department of Genetics, Biology and Biochemistry, and Molecular Biotechnology Center, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.
Several factors affect the autoimmune response, including iron-dependent modulation of T cells. Hemopexin is the plasma protein with the highest binding affinity to heme. It mediates heme-iron recovery in the liver, thus controlling heme-iron availability in peripheral cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Pathol
July 2008
Molecular Biotechnology Center, Via Nizza 52, 10126 Torino, Italy.
Intravascular hemolysis results in the release of massive amounts of hemoglobin and heme into plasma, where they are rapidly bound by haptoglobin and hemopexin, respectively. Data from haptoglobin and hemopexin knockout mice have shown that both proteins protect from renal damage after phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis, whereas double-mutant mice were especially prone to liver damage. However, the specific role of hemopexin remains elusive because of the difficulty in discriminating between hemoglobin and heme recovery.
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