DISTRIBUTION OF IRON IN RETICULOCYTES AFTER INHIBITION OF HEME-SYNTHESIS WITH SUCCINYLACETONE - EXAMINATION OF THE INTERMEDIATES INVOLVED IN IRON-METABOLISM
Dr. Richardson et al., DISTRIBUTION OF IRON IN RETICULOCYTES AFTER INHIBITION OF HEME-SYNTHESIS WITH SUCCINYLACETONE - EXAMINATION OF THE INTERMEDIATES INVOLVED IN IRON-METABOLISM, Blood, 87(8), 1996, pp. 3477-3488
Succinylacetone (SA) is an inhibitor of heme synthesis that acts on th
e enzyme delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase. When reticulocytes are
incubated with Fe-59-transferrin (Fe-59-Tf) in the presence of SA, th
ere is an accumulation of Fe-59 in the mitochondrion and in a cytosoli
c non-heme intermediate that has been described as a putative Fe trans
porter (Adams et al, Biochim Biophys Acta 1012:243, 1989). Considering
these observations, the present study was designed to examine the int
ermediates of Fe metabolism in control and SA-treated reticulocytes. T
his investigation showed that in the cytosol of control cells, most Fe
-59 was incorporated into hemoglobin (Hb) with a minor amount entering
ferritin. In addition, a previously unrecognized cytosolic intermedia
te was identified (band X) that was absent when heme synthesis was inh
ibited with CA. Upon reincubation of SA-treated reticulocytes with pro
toporphyrin IX, band X initially increased in intensity and then decre
ased later in the incubation. In contrast, when Fe-59-labeled control
cells were reincubated in the presence of SA and unlabeled diferric Tf
, there was a marked decrease in the intensity of band X. These experi
ments suggest that component X may be an intermediate involved in the
transfer of heme in the cytosol. Alternatively, these data could also
be interpreted as indicating that band X may be a short-lived hemoprot
ein. We have confirmed the presence of an Fe-59-containing molecule in
the cytosol of SA-treated reticulocytes (band Y) that is not present
in control cells. However, when cells were incubated with Fe-59-Tf plu
s SA and then chased in the presence of SA and unlabeled diferric Tf,
there was no decrease in this cytosolic pool of Fe, suggesting that it
was not a intermediate supplying Fe for either ferritin or heme synth
esis. Finally, there is little low molecular weight (M(r)) Fe in retic
ulocytes, and our studies suggest that the low-M(r) Fe present does no
t behave as an intermediate. Moreover, after inhibition of heme synthe
sis with CA, Fe-59 in the low-M(r) compartment was markedly decreased,
suggesting that this component may be heme or a low-M(r) heme-contain
ing molecule. Considering the apparent lack of a cytosolic Fe transpor
ter in rabbit reticulocytes, an alternative model of intracellular Fe
transport is proposed that does not implicate a potentially toxic inte
rmediate pool of low-M(r) Fe complexes. (C) 1996 by The American Socie
ty of Hematology.