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Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation

We recently reported a previously unknown salutary role for xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) in intravascular heme overload whereby hepatocellular export of XOR to the circulation was identified as a seminal step in affording protection. However, the cellular signaling and export mechanisms underpinnin...

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Autores principales: DeVallance, Evan R., Schmidt, Heidi M., Seman, Madison, Lewis, Sara E., Wood, Katherine C., Vickers, Schuyler D., Hahn, Scott A., Velayutham, Murugesan, Hileman, Emily A., Vitturi, Dario A., Leonardi, Roberta, Straub, Adam C., Kelley, Eric E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10506059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37703667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102866
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author DeVallance, Evan R.
Schmidt, Heidi M.
Seman, Madison
Lewis, Sara E.
Wood, Katherine C.
Vickers, Schuyler D.
Hahn, Scott A.
Velayutham, Murugesan
Hileman, Emily A.
Vitturi, Dario A.
Leonardi, Roberta
Straub, Adam C.
Kelley, Eric E.
author_facet DeVallance, Evan R.
Schmidt, Heidi M.
Seman, Madison
Lewis, Sara E.
Wood, Katherine C.
Vickers, Schuyler D.
Hahn, Scott A.
Velayutham, Murugesan
Hileman, Emily A.
Vitturi, Dario A.
Leonardi, Roberta
Straub, Adam C.
Kelley, Eric E.
author_sort DeVallance, Evan R.
collection PubMed
description We recently reported a previously unknown salutary role for xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) in intravascular heme overload whereby hepatocellular export of XOR to the circulation was identified as a seminal step in affording protection. However, the cellular signaling and export mechanisms underpinning this process were not identified. Here, we present novel data showing hepatocytes upregulate XOR expression/protein abundance and actively release it to the extracellular compartment following exposure to hemopexin-bound hemin, hemin or free iron. For example, murine (AML-12 cells) hepatocytes treated with hemin (10 μM) exported XOR to the medium in the absence of cell death or loss of membrane integrity (2.0 ± 1.0 vs 16 ± 9 μU/mL p < 0.0001). The path of exocytosis was found to be noncanonical as pretreatment of the hepatocytes with Vaculin-1, a lysosomal trafficking inhibitor, and not Brefeldin A inhibited XOR release and promoted intracellular XOR accumulation (84 ± 17 vs 24 ± 8 hemin vs 5 ± 3 control μU/mg). Interestingly, free iron (Fe(2+) and Fe(3+)) induced similar upregulation and release of XOR compared to hemin. Conversely, concomitant treatment with hemin and the classic transition metal chelator DTPA (20 μM) or uric acid completely blocked XOR release (p < 0.01). Our previously published time course showed XOR release from hepatocytes likely required transcriptional upregulation. As such, we determined that both Sp1 and NF-kB were acutely activated by hemin treatment (∼2-fold > controls for both, p < 0.05) and that silencing either or TLR4 with siRNA prevented hemin-induced XOR upregulation (p < 0.01). Finally, to confirm direct action of these transcription factors on the Xdh gene, chromatin immunoprecipitation was performed indicating that hemin significantly enriched (∼5-fold) both Sp1 and NF-kB near the transcription start site. In summary, our study identified a previously unknown pathway by which XOR is upregulated via SP1/NF-kB and subsequently exported to the extracellular environment. This is, to our knowledge, the very first study to demonstrate mechanistically that XOR can be specifically targeted for export as the seminal step in a compensatory response to heme/Fe overload.
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spelling pubmed-105060592023-09-19 Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation DeVallance, Evan R. Schmidt, Heidi M. Seman, Madison Lewis, Sara E. Wood, Katherine C. Vickers, Schuyler D. Hahn, Scott A. Velayutham, Murugesan Hileman, Emily A. Vitturi, Dario A. Leonardi, Roberta Straub, Adam C. Kelley, Eric E. Redox Biol Research Paper We recently reported a previously unknown salutary role for xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) in intravascular heme overload whereby hepatocellular export of XOR to the circulation was identified as a seminal step in affording protection. However, the cellular signaling and export mechanisms underpinning this process were not identified. Here, we present novel data showing hepatocytes upregulate XOR expression/protein abundance and actively release it to the extracellular compartment following exposure to hemopexin-bound hemin, hemin or free iron. For example, murine (AML-12 cells) hepatocytes treated with hemin (10 μM) exported XOR to the medium in the absence of cell death or loss of membrane integrity (2.0 ± 1.0 vs 16 ± 9 μU/mL p < 0.0001). The path of exocytosis was found to be noncanonical as pretreatment of the hepatocytes with Vaculin-1, a lysosomal trafficking inhibitor, and not Brefeldin A inhibited XOR release and promoted intracellular XOR accumulation (84 ± 17 vs 24 ± 8 hemin vs 5 ± 3 control μU/mg). Interestingly, free iron (Fe(2+) and Fe(3+)) induced similar upregulation and release of XOR compared to hemin. Conversely, concomitant treatment with hemin and the classic transition metal chelator DTPA (20 μM) or uric acid completely blocked XOR release (p < 0.01). Our previously published time course showed XOR release from hepatocytes likely required transcriptional upregulation. As such, we determined that both Sp1 and NF-kB were acutely activated by hemin treatment (∼2-fold > controls for both, p < 0.05) and that silencing either or TLR4 with siRNA prevented hemin-induced XOR upregulation (p < 0.01). Finally, to confirm direct action of these transcription factors on the Xdh gene, chromatin immunoprecipitation was performed indicating that hemin significantly enriched (∼5-fold) both Sp1 and NF-kB near the transcription start site. In summary, our study identified a previously unknown pathway by which XOR is upregulated via SP1/NF-kB and subsequently exported to the extracellular environment. This is, to our knowledge, the very first study to demonstrate mechanistically that XOR can be specifically targeted for export as the seminal step in a compensatory response to heme/Fe overload. Elsevier 2023-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10506059/ /pubmed/37703667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102866 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
DeVallance, Evan R.
Schmidt, Heidi M.
Seman, Madison
Lewis, Sara E.
Wood, Katherine C.
Vickers, Schuyler D.
Hahn, Scott A.
Velayutham, Murugesan
Hileman, Emily A.
Vitturi, Dario A.
Leonardi, Roberta
Straub, Adam C.
Kelley, Eric E.
Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title_full Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title_fullStr Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title_full_unstemmed Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title_short Hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
title_sort hemin and iron increase synthesis and trigger export of xanthine oxidoreductase from hepatocytes to the circulation
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10506059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37703667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.102866
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