Physiological implications of mammalian ferritin-binding proteins interacting with circulating ferritin and a new aspect of ferritin- and zinc-binding proteins.

Koichi Orino
Author Information
  1. Koichi Orino: Laboratory of Veterinary Biochemistry, School of Veterinary Medicine, Kitasato University, Towada, Aomori, 034-8628, Japan. orino@vmas.kitasato-u.ac.jp.

Abstract

Serum ferritin levels are relatively low (<1 µg/ml) and serum ferritin generally disappears rapidly from the circulation (t 1/2 < 10 min). There are various mammalian ferritin-binding proteins (FBPs) in the blood. Ferritin is cleared by direct uptake by ferritin receptors and by indirect receptor-mediated uptake of FBP complexed with ferritin. Mammalian ferritin binds both heme and iron, and binding occurs through two mechanisms: direct binding with ferritin to H-kininogen and anti-ferritin autoantibody, and indirect heme-mediated binding of fibrinogen and apolipoprotein B to ferritin. Anti-ferritin autoantibody and fibrinogen are proposed to be common mammalian FBPs, as is α2-macroglobulin. FBP-ferritin binding may affect blood coagulation and influence iron metabolism, oxidative condition, angiogenesis, inflammatory condition and immune response. Aside from apolipoprotein B, FBPs bind zinc ion to form antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agents. The possible simultaneous uptake of zinc ion with FBP-ferritin complex is likely to attenuate iron- and/or heme-mediated oxidative damage and inflammatory response.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Animals
Antioxidants
Apolipoproteins B
Carrier Proteins
Ferritins
Fibrinogen
Heme
Humans
Iron-Binding Proteins
Mammals
Oxidative Stress
Receptors, Cell Surface

Chemicals

Antioxidants
Apolipoproteins B
Carrier Proteins
Iron-Binding Proteins
Receptors, Cell Surface
ferritin receptor
zinc-binding protein
Heme
Fibrinogen
Ferritins

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0ferritinbindingmammalianproteinsFBPsuptakeferritin-bindingbloodFerritindirectindirectironautoantibodyheme-mediatedfibrinogenapolipoproteinBFBP-ferritinoxidativeconditioninflammatoryresponsezincionSerumlevelsrelativelylow<1 µg/mlserumgenerallydisappearsrapidlycirculationt1/2 < 10 minvariousclearedreceptorsreceptor-mediatedFBPcomplexedMammalianbindshemeoccurstwomechanisms:H-kininogenanti-ferritinAnti-ferritinproposedcommonα2-macroglobulinmayaffectcoagulationinfluencemetabolismangiogenesisimmuneAsidebindformantioxidantanti-inflammatoryagentspossiblesimultaneouscomplexlikelyattenuateiron-and/ordamagePhysiologicalimplicationsinteractingcirculatingnewaspectferritin-zinc-bindingFerritin-bindingproteinIronOxidativestressZinc

Similar Articles

Cited By