Britton Robert S, Leicester Katherine L, Bacon Bruce R
Int J Hematol. 2002 Oct;76(3):219-28. doi: 10.1007/BF02982791.
Iron is an essential mineral for normal cellular physiology, but an excess can result in cell injury. Iron in low-molecular-weight forms may play a catalytic role in the initiation of free radical reactions. The resulting oxyradicals have the potential to damage cellular lipids, nucleic acids, proteins, and carbohydrates; the result is wide-ranging impairment in cellular function and integrity. The rate of free radical production must overwhelm the cytoprotective defenses of cells before injury occurs. There is substantial evidence that iron overload in experimental animals can result in oxidative damage to lipids in vivo, once the concentration of iron exceeds a threshold level. In the liver, this lipid peroxidation is associated with impairment of membrane-dependent functions of mitochondria and lysosomes. Iron overload impairs hepatic mitochondrial respiration primarily through a decrease in cytochrome C oxidase activity, and hepatocellular calcium homeostasis may be compromised through damage to mitochondrial and microsomal calcium sequestration. DNA has also been reported to be a target of iron-induced damage, and this may have consequences in regard to malignant transformation. Mitochondrial respiratory enzymes and plasma membrane enzymes such as sodium-potassium-adenosine triphosphatase (Na(+) + K(+)-ATPase) may be key targets of damage by non-transferrin-bound iron in cardiac myocytes. Levels of some antioxidants are decreased during iron overload, a finding suggestive of ongoing oxidative stress. Reduced cellular levels of ATP, lysosomal fragility, impaired cellular calcium homeostasis, and damage to DNA all may contribute to cellular injury in iron overload. Evidence is accumulating that free-radical production is increased in patients with iron overload. Iron-loaded patients have elevated plasma levels of thiobarbituric acid reactants and increased hepatic levels of aldehyde-protein adducts, indicating lipid peroxidation. Hepatic DNA of iron-loaded patients shows evidence of damage, including mutations of the tumor suppressor gene p53. Although phlebotomy therapy is effective in removing excess iron in hereditary hemochromatosis, chelation therapy is required in the treatment of many patients who have combined secondary and transfusional iron overload due to disorders in erythropoiesis. In patients with beta-thalassemia who undergo regular transfusions, deferoxamine treatment has been shown to be effective in preventing iron-induced tissue injury and in prolonging life expectancy. The use of the oral chelator deferiprone remains controversial, and work is continuing on the development of new orally effective iron chelators.
铁是正常细胞生理所必需的矿物质,但过量的铁会导致细胞损伤。低分子量形式的铁可能在自由基反应的引发中起催化作用。由此产生的氧自由基有可能损害细胞脂质、核酸、蛋白质和碳水化合物;结果是细胞功能和完整性受到广泛损害。在损伤发生之前,自由基的产生速率必须超过细胞的细胞保护防御能力。有大量证据表明,一旦铁的浓度超过阈值水平,实验动物体内的铁过载会导致脂质的氧化损伤。在肝脏中,这种脂质过氧化与线粒体和溶酶体的膜依赖性功能受损有关。铁过载主要通过细胞色素C氧化酶活性的降低损害肝脏线粒体呼吸,肝细胞钙稳态可能因线粒体和微粒体钙隔离受损而受到影响。据报道,DNA也是铁诱导损伤的靶点,这可能对恶性转化产生影响。线粒体呼吸酶和质膜酶,如钠钾腺苷三磷酸酶(Na(+) + K(+)-ATPase),可能是心肌细胞中非转铁蛋白结合铁损伤的关键靶点。在铁过载期间,一些抗氧化剂的水平会降低,这一发现提示存在持续的氧化应激。细胞内ATP水平降低、溶酶体脆弱性增加、细胞钙稳态受损以及DNA损伤都可能导致铁过载中的细胞损伤。越来越多的证据表明,铁过载患者体内自由基的产生会增加。铁负荷患者的血浆硫代巴比妥酸反应物水平升高,肝脏中醛蛋白加合物水平增加,表明存在脂质过氧化。铁负荷患者的肝脏DNA显示出损伤迹象,包括肿瘤抑制基因p53的突变。尽管放血疗法在去除遗传性血色素沉着症中的过量铁方面有效,但对于许多因红细胞生成障碍而合并继发性和输血性铁过载的患者,需要进行螯合疗法。在接受定期输血的β地中海贫血患者中,去铁胺治疗已被证明在预防铁诱导的组织损伤和延长预期寿命方面有效。口服螯合剂去铁酮的使用仍存在争议,新型口服有效铁螯合剂的研发工作仍在继续。