Brain iron acquisition depends on age and sex in iron-deficient mice

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology(2024)

Cited 0|Views2
No score
Abstract
Adequate and timely delivery of iron is essential for brain development. The uptake of transferrin-bound (Tf) iron into the brain peaks at the time of myelination, whereas the recently discovered H-ferritin (FTH1) transport of iron into the brain continues to increase beyond the peak in myelination. Here, we interrogate the impact of dietary iron deficiency (ID) on the uptake of FTH1- and Tf-bound iron. In the present study, we used C57BL/6J male and female mice at a developing (post-natal day (PND) 15) and adult age (PND 85). In developing mice, ID results in increased iron delivery from both FTH1 and Tf for both males and females. The amount of iron uptake from FTH1 was higher than the Tf and this difference between the iron delivery was much greater in females. In contrast, in the adult model, ID was associated with increased brain iron uptake by both FTH1 and Tf but only in the males. There was no increased uptake from either protein in the females. Moreover, transferrin receptor expression on the microvasculature as well as whole brain iron, and H and L ferritin levels revealed the male brains became iron deficient but not the female brains. Last, under normal dietary conditions, 55Fe uptake was higher in the developing group from both delivery proteins than in the adult group. These results indicate that there are differences in iron acquisition between the developing and adult brain for FTH1 and Tf during nutritional ID and demonstrate a level of regulation of brain iron uptake that is age and sex-dependent. Developmental iron deficiency (ID) increased the brain 55Fe uptake in both males and females compared to the control mice. In adult mice, ID increases iron uptake in males but not females. The uptake of 55Fe was 10 times higher in the developing mice compared to the adult mice regardless of the sex and diet. Overall, our data concludes sex and diet effect of iron uptake into the brain during development and in developed brains.image
More
Translated text
Key words
brain,H-ferritin,iron,iron deficiency,transferrin
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined