New insights into iron homeostasis through the study of non-HFE hereditary haemochromatosis |
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Authors: | Roetto Antonella Camaschella Clara |
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Affiliation: | Dipartimento di Scienze Cliniche e Biologiche, Università di Torino, Azienda Ospedaliera San Luigi Gonzaga, Regione Gonzole, 10, 10043 Orbassano, Torino, Italy. |
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Abstract: | Non-HFE haemochromatosis is a negative definition applied to all those haemochromatosis disorders that are unrelated to HFE mutations. Four genes are responsible for the distinct types of non-HFE haemochromatosis: hepcidin and hemojuvelin are the genes involved in type 2 or juvenile haemochromatosis, transferrin receptor 2 is involved in type 3 haemochromatosis, and ferroportin 1 is mutated in type 4, the atypical dominant form of primary iron overload. Molecular genetic studies of these conditions have greatly contributed to our understanding of the regulation of iron absorption. A milestone was the discovery that hepcidin, the key iron regulator in mice, is the gene mutated in the most severe, juvenile form of haemochromatosis. This finding indicates a fundamental role of hepcidin in inhibiting both iron absorption from duodenal cells and iron release from macrophages, and has opened up a new view of haemochromatosis as a disorder of hepcidin. |
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