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Hepcidin mediates transcriptional changes that modulate acute cytokine-induced inflammatory responses in mice
Ivana De Domenico, … , Diane M. Ward, Jerry Kaplan
Ivana De Domenico, … , Diane M. Ward, Jerry Kaplan
Published June 7, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(7):2395-2405. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI42011.
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Research Article Inflammation

Hepcidin mediates transcriptional changes that modulate acute cytokine-induced inflammatory responses in mice

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Abstract

Hepcidin is a peptide hormone that regulates iron homeostasis and acts as an antimicrobial peptide. It is expressed and secreted by a variety of cell types in response to iron loading and inflammation. Hepcidin mediates iron homeostasis by binding to the iron exporter ferroportin, inducing its internalization and degradation via activation of the protein kinase Jak2 and the subsequent phosphorylation of ferroportin. Here we have shown that hepcidin-activated Jak2 also phosphorylates the transcription factor Stat3, resulting in a transcriptional response. Hepcidin treatment of ferroportin-expressing mouse macrophages showed changes in mRNA expression levels of a wide variety of genes. The changes in transcript levels for half of these genes were a direct effect of hepcidin, as shown by cycloheximide insensitivity, and dependent on the presence of Stat3. Hepcidin-mediated transcriptional changes modulated LPS-induced transcription in both cultured macrophages and in vivo mouse models, as demonstrated by suppression of IL-6 and TNF-α transcript and secreted protein. Hepcidin-mediated transcription in mice also suppressed toxicity and morbidity due to single doses of LPS, poly(I:C), and turpentine, which is used to model chronic inflammatory disease. Most notably, we demonstrated that hepcidin pretreatment protected mice from a lethal dose of LPS and that hepcidin-knockout mice could be rescued from LPS toxicity by injection of hepcidin. The results of our study suggest a new function for hepcidin in modulating acute inflammatory responses.

Authors

Ivana De Domenico, Tian Y. Zhang, Curry L. Koening, Ryan W. Branch, Nyall London, Eric Lo, Raymond A. Daynes, James P. Kushner, Dean Li, Diane M. Ward, Jerry Kaplan

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Figure 6

Model for hepcidin’s role in modifying inflammation.

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Model for hepcidin’s role in modifying inflammation.
LPS binding to TLR-...
LPS binding to TLR-4 results in increased transcripts for inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6. Activation of TLR-4 directly or through IL-6 binding to its receptor induces transcription of hepcidin. Increased serum hepcidin binds to Fpn, resulting in binding and activation of Jak2/Stat3. Activation of Jak2 leads to downregulation of Fpn and decreased iron export into plasma. Activation of Stat3 leads to a transcriptional response resulting in increased concentrations of SOCS3. SOCS3 dampens signal transduction by TLRs and cytokine receptors, resulting in decreased inflammatory cytokines and hepcidin transcription.

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