Iron and neurodegeneration in the multiple sclerosis brain

S Hametner, I Wimmer, L Haider… - Annals of …, 2013 - Wiley Online Library
S Hametner, I Wimmer, L Haider, S Pfeifenbring, W Brück, H Lassmann
Annals of neurology, 2013Wiley Online Library
Objective Iron may contribute to the pathogenesis and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS)
due to its accumulation in the human brain with age. Our study focused on nonheme iron
distribution and the expression of the iron‐related proteins ferritin, hephaestin, and
ceruloplasmin in relation to oxidative damage in the brain tissue of 33 MS and 30 control
cases. Methods We performed (1) whole‐genome microarrays including 4 MS and 3 control
cases to analyze the expression of iron‐related genes,(2) nonheme iron histochemistry,(3) …
Objective
Iron may contribute to the pathogenesis and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) due to its accumulation in the human brain with age. Our study focused on nonheme iron distribution and the expression of the iron‐related proteins ferritin, hephaestin, and ceruloplasmin in relation to oxidative damage in the brain tissue of 33 MS and 30 control cases.
Methods
We performed (1) whole‐genome microarrays including 4 MS and 3 control cases to analyze the expression of iron‐related genes, (2) nonheme iron histochemistry, (3) immunohistochemistry for proteins of iron metabolism, and (4) quantitative analysis by digital densitometry and cell counting in regions representing different stages of lesion maturation.
Results
We found an age‐related increase of iron in the white matter of controls as well as in patients with short disease duration. In chronic MS, however, there was a significant decrease of iron in the normal‐appearing white matter (NAWM) corresponding with disease duration, when corrected for age. This decrease of iron in oligodendrocytes and myelin was associated with an upregulation of iron‐exporting ferroxidases. In active MS lesions, iron was apparently released from dying oligodendrocytes, resulting in extracellular accumulation of iron and uptake into microglia and macrophages. Iron‐containing microglia showed signs of cell degeneration. At lesion edges and within centers of lesions, iron accumulated in astrocytes and axons.
Interpretation
Iron decreases in the NAWM of MS patients with increasing disease duration. Cellular degeneration in MS lesions leads to waves of iron liberation, which may propagate neurodegeneration together with inflammatory oxidative burst. Ann Neurol 2013;74:848–861
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