Iron in Health and Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Major site of iron storage

A

liver

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2
Q

vast majority of iron is present in

A

hemoglobins in RBCs

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3
Q

DMT1

A

divalent metal transporter that transports Fe2+ into enterocytes

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4
Q

Ferritin

A

stores protein within cells

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5
Q

Hephaestin

A

oxidzes Fe2+ to Fe3+ when leaving the enterocyte to prep it for for binding to transferrin

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6
Q

TFR

A

receptors that take in Fe2+ from transferrin

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7
Q

HFE (High Fe)

A

interacts with TFN receptors (TFN1)

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8
Q

____ levels in serum usually reflect body Fe stores

A

Ferritin levels

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9
Q

An important exporter cell

A

enterocyte

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10
Q

TFR

A

transferrin receptors –all cells have this for import

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11
Q

Hepcidin is produced almost exclusively by _____

A

hepatocytes

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12
Q

Master hormone regulating iron export and role

A

Hepcidin: acts as a brake by binding and degrading ferroportin. Blocks cellular Fe export

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13
Q

Factors that regulate serum hepcidin levels and order of priority

A

inflamation/infection > anemia/hypoxia > iron levels

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14
Q

How does intracellular iron levels regulate serum hepcidin?

A
  • feedback mechanism

- high intracellular Fe increases hepcidin production

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15
Q

How does anemia/hypoxia affect hepcidin levels?

A

Low hemoglobin decreases hepcidin production. Need to maintain oxygen carrying capacity

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16
Q

How does inflammation/infection affect hepcidin levels?

A

Increase hepcidin production and decreases serum iron levels

want to deprive infection from iron–evolution

17
Q

True or false: The factors regulating serum hepcidin levels can coexist and do not exert equal control

18
Q

Decreased hepcidin levels increase _____

A

ferroportin levels

19
Q

Iron deficiency anemia results in (increased/decreased) hepcidin levels

A

decreased

condition response to iron supplementation

20
Q

In anemia of chronic inflammation, what would you expect these levels from lab to be?

  • Hgb
  • Hct
  • serum Fe
  • Fe binding capacity
  • serum ferritin
  • RBC size
A
  • low Hgb
  • low Hct
  • low serum Fe
  • low Fe serum binding capacity
  • normal serum Ferritin
  • normal or small sized RBCs
21
Q

In anemia of chronic inflammation, what happens to hepcidin levels?

Is Fe supplementation effective?

A

inflammation overrides anemia stimulus
-you get increased hepcidin to inhibit ferroportin and thus export of Fe from enterocytes and macrophages.

  • in anemia, you would want decreased hepcidin to get more Fe out to RBCs.
  • supplement not effective-primary problem is Fe incorporation into RBCs
22
Q

In anemia with ineffective erythropoeisis, what would you expect the levels to be of lab results?

  • Hgb
  • Hct
  • Serum Fe
  • Fe binding capacity
  • serum ferritin
  • RBCs
A
  • low Hgb
  • low Hct
  • high, highly saturated (transfusions increases Fe load and RBCs cant take up as much)
  • high serum ferritin
  • small, microcytosis
23
Q

In ineffective erythropoeisis, what happens to hepcidin?

A

Anemia overrides Iron levels. So you will get decreased hepcidin and increased ferroportin. Gut, macrophages, liver increase Fe export to bone marrow. Transfusions add Fe. = Fe OVERLOAD!

24
Q

What is used to assess iron binding capacity?

A

transferrin

25
Genetic Hemochromatosis
Uncontrolled Fe uptake from gut, iron overload
26
What is the most frequent defect in genetic hemochromatosis?
HFE mutation! One of the components of the TFR1 receptor
27
Lab results with someone with genetic hemochromatosis: - Hgb - Hct - Serum Fe - Ferritin
- normal Hgb - normal Hct - high serum Fe (since defective transferrin receptor into cells) - very high ferritin levels
28
Effect of hepcidin with genetic hemochromatosis
consumer cells with TfR2 (non mutated) have to take up more iron, so decrease hepcidin to increase ferroportin. Enterocytes, macrophages, hepatocytes, increase Fe export.
29
HFE mutations effect which organ first
liver
30
treatment for hereditary hemochromatosis
phlebotomy/chelation.