By Gregory M. Vercellotti, MD
2009-03-01
Dr. Vercellotti indicated no relevant conflicts of interest.
Silvestri L, Pagani A, Nai A, et al. The serine protease matriptase-2 (TMPRSS6) inhibits hepcidin activation by cleaving membrane hemojuvelin. Cell Metabolism. 2008;8:502-11.
At the 2007 ASH annual meeting in Atlanta, Ernest Beutler was
scheduled to present another amazing hematologic breakthrough during
the plenary session. Because of his ill health, his son Bruce presented
pictures of a semi-hairless mouse with anemia, microcytosis, iron
deficiency, and high hepatic levels of hepcidin mRNA transcripts.1 In response to high doses of iron, they grew hair. (Some iron-deficient humans have hair loss.) This so-called “mask”
mouse could not absorb iron from the gut (most likely due to the high
hepcidin levels) and had a mutation on chromosome 15 in a gene encoding
a transmembrane serine protease of unknown function, TMPRSS6 or
matriptase-2. Dr. Beutler’s team demonstrated that the protein encoded
by the normal TMPRSS6 gene suppressed hepatic hepcidin
expression induced by bone morphogenic protein (BMP), hemojuvelin
(HJV), SMAD-1, and IL-6, while the protein encoded by the mutated mask
allele or a mutated protein with an inactive protease domain did not
suppress. They concluded that TMPRSS6 is required to sense iron
deficiency, but its sensing mechanism remained speculative.2
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Now, Silvestri, et al., from Clara Camaschella’s group in Milan,
report that matriptase-2 inhibits hepcidin activation by cleaving
membrane HJV, thus interfering with primary hepcidin signaling in the
hepatocyte. To review, hepcidin levels are regulated by body iron
levels. Inflammation and cytokines such as IL-6, erythroid factors such
as growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15), and hypoxia via
hypoxia-inducible transcription factors all play roles in modulating
hepcidin synthesis. Hepatic hepcidin regulation by iron is regulated by
HJV, which acts as a co-receptor for BMP to the BMP receptor, signaling
a cascade to SMAD-4 translocation to the nucleus and hepcidin
transcription. HFE, TfR2, and transferring are critical to this process.3
In an elegant set of studies, Silvestri, et al. demonstrate that
matriptase-2 cleaves membrane HJV releasing proteolytic fragments and
disrupts the HJV/BMP complex binding to the BMP receptor, inhibiting
hepcidin signaling (see Figure). The mask mutant matriptase-2
and a partially mutated matriptase-2 from a family with refractory iron
deficiency did not cleave HJV and, when expressed in zebrafish, caused
anemia. Soluble HJV cleaved in vitro by furin (distinct from
membrane HJV) can act as a decoy receptor competing for membrane HJV,
thus decreasing hepcidin. Matriptase-2 does not cleave soluble HJV.
These studies are relevant in both iron deficiency and iron overload. Two recent publications reported mutations in the TMPRSS6 in humans associated with familial iron deficiency refractory to oral iron.4,5
Thus, these translational studies extend our understanding of iron
metabolism. Unmasking the role of this protease, matriptase-2, adds
another brick in the foundation of hematology that our late ASH
president, Ernest Beutler, had so importantly helped build.
- Beutler E, Lee P, Gelbart T, et al. The mask
mutation identifies TMPRSS6 as an essential suppressor of hepcidin gene
expression, required for normal uptake of dietary iron. Blood (Annual Meeting Abstracts). 2007;110:114.
- Du X, She E, Gelbart T, et al. The serine protease TMPRSS6 is required to sense iron deficiency. Science. 2008;320:1088-92.
- Zhang AS, Enns CA. Iron homeostasis: recently identified proteins provide insight into novel control mechanisms. J Biol Chem. 2009;284:711-5.
- Guillem F, Lawson S, Kannengiesser C, et al. Two nonsense mutations in the TMPRSS6 gene in a patient with microcytic anemia and iron deficiency. Blood. 2008;112:2089-91.
- Melis MA, Cau M, Congiu R, et al. A mutation in the TMPRSS6
gene, encoding a transmembrane serine protease that suppresses hepcidin
production, in familial iron deficiency anemia refractory to oral iron. Haematologica. 2008;93:1473-9.
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