Cellular Iron Deficiency Disrupts Thyroid Hormone Regulated Gene Expression in Developing Hippocampal Neurons.

细胞缺铁会扰乱发育中海马神经元中甲状腺激素调节的基因表达

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作者:Monko Timothy R, Tripp Emma H, Burr Sierra E, Gunderson Karina N, Lanier Lorene M, Georgieff Michael K, Bastian Thomas W
BACKGROUND: Developing neurons have high thyroid hormone and iron requirements to support their metabolically demanding growth. Early-life iron and thyroid-hormone deficiencies are prevalent and often coexist, and each independently increases risk of permanently impaired neurobehavioral function in children. Early-life dietary iron deficiency reduces thyroid-hormone concentrations and impairs thyroid hormone-responsive gene expression in the neonatal rat brain, but it is unclear whether the effect is cell-intrinsic. OBJECTIVES: This study determined whether neuronal-specific iron deficiency alters thyroid hormone-regulated gene expression in developing neurons. METHODS: Iron deficiency was induced in primary mouse embryonic hippocampal neuron cultures with the iron chelator deferoxamine (DFO) beginning at 3 d in vitro (DIV). At 11DIV and 18DIV, thyroid hormone-regulated gene messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)concentrations indexing thyroid hormone homeostasis (Hairless, mu-crystallin, Type II deiodinase, solute carrier family member 1c1, and solute carrier family member 16a2) and neurodevelopment (neurogranin, Parvalbumin, and Krüppel-like factor 9) were quantified. To assess the effect of iron repletion, DFO was removed at 14DIV from a subset of DFO-treated cultures, and gene expression and adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) concentrations were quantified at 21DIV. RESULTS: At 11DIV and 18DIV, neuronal iron deficiency decreased neurogranin, Parvalbumin, and mu-crystallin, and by 18DIV, solute carrier family member 16a2, solute carrier family member 1c1, Type II deiodinase, and Hairless were increased, suggesting cellular sensing of a functionally abnormal thyroid hormone state. Dimensionality reduction with Principal component analysis reveals that thyroid hormone homeostatic genes strongly correlate with and predict iron status. Iron repletion from 14-21DIV did not restore ATP concentration, and Principal component analysis suggests that, after iron repletion, cultures maintain a gene expression signature indicative of previous iron deficiency. CONCLUSIONS: These novel findings suggest there is an intracellular mechanism coordinating cellular iron/thyroid hormone activities. We speculate this is a part of the homeostatic response to acutely match neuronal energy production and growth signaling. However, the adaptation to iron deficiency may cause permanent deficits in thyroid hormone-dependent neurodevelopmental processes even after recovery from iron deficiency.

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