Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Play Play Play Play
Unregistered User
Click here if this is not your Personal Edition
 
Contact Us | Free E-Mail Updates | Journals | Register a colleague
 
 
Thalassemia
 
   
 
SEARCH   
Doctor's Guide Free CME
Medline
Congress Resource Centre
 

 EXPLORE :
   Most Read News
 All News  All News
 All Webcasts / CME  All Webcasts / CME
 All Cases  All Cases
 Congress Resource Centre  Congress Resource Centre
 All Medical Resources  All Medical Resources
 Medical  My Personal Edition



Warning | Privacy

 

 
 Recent news - Thalassemia
    New Test Measures Hepcidin, Can Help Diagnose Anaemias and Iron Disorders - (DGNews)
    Single Lot of Epoetin Alfa Recalled Due to Damaged Vials - (DGNews)
    Pulmonary hypertension: an increasingly recognized complication of hereditary hemolytic anemias and HIV infection - (JAMA)
    Sequential Deferiprone-Deferoxamine Tops Deferiprone Alone in Treatment of Thalassemia Major: Presented at ASH - (DGDispatch)
    Adding Deferiprone to Deferoxamine Decreases Beta Thalassemia Complications: Presented at ASH - (DGDispatch)

    News archive

     Recent webcasts/CME - Thalassemia

    Webcasts/CME archive

     Recent cases - Thalassemia
      Posterior Mediastinal Masses in a Patient with Beta-Thalassaemia Intermedia
      Massive Hemothorax in a Beta-Thalassemic Patient Due to Spontaneous Rupture of Extramedullary Hematopoietic Masses: Diagnosis and Successful Treatment
      Rheumatoid Arthritis in Thalassemia Intermedia: Coincidence or Association?
      Beta-Thalassemia Minor and Newly Diagnosed Polycythemia Rubra Vera in a 71-Year-Old Woman

      Cases archive
        




      my personal edition > thalassemia > news
      divider

        E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague

      DGNews


      NIH Scientists Discover Novel Cause Of Iron Overload In Thalassemia Disorders

        BETHESDA, MD -- September 5, 2007 -- Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have discovered a novel cause of iron overload in patients with thalassemia.

        According to the study, thalassemia patients overproduce a protein called GDF15, which suppresses the production of a liver protein, hepcidin, which in turn leads to an increase in the uptake of dietary iron in the gut.

        This finding has implications for iron metabolism in other diseases, including cancer, and may contribute to the future development of therapies for thalassemia.

        The study, led by researchers at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) at the NIH, appears online August 26, 2007, as an Advanced Online Publication in the journal, Nature Medicine.

        Blood transfusions contribute to iron overload in people with thalassemia, but these people also suffer from iron overload independent of blood transfusions. Excess iron causes damage to many organs including the heart and liver, and diabetes can develop in severe cases. Patients with thalassemia often require treatment to remove the excess iron to prevent tissue damage.

        "The treatment of iron overload in patients with thalassemia is particularly difficult because of their anemia," says Jeffery L. Miller, MD, chief of the Molecular Genomics and Therapeutics Section of the Molecular Medicine Branch, Division of Intramural Research, NIDDK, and last author of the study. "So we have been searching for the mechanism responsible for iron overload in thalassemia in hopes of finding new therapies for those patients."

        Thalassemia patients absorb too much iron from food due to abnormally low levels of hepcidin, which regulates iron uptake from the gut. People with thalassemia should produce hepcidin at high levels. Instead, these patients have reduced levels of hepcidin. This confounded the authors and led them to ask if the low levels of hepcidin were somehow caused by the underlying problem in thalassemia -abnormal development of red blood cells.

        Red blood cells, also called erythrocytes, are filled with hemoglobin, which transports oxygen throughout the body. Erythrocytes circulate in the blood, but they originate in the bone marrow as erythroblasts and go through several stages of differentiation until they finally leave the bone marrow and enter the blood stream as fully-formed erythrocytes. Previous research has shown that people with thalassemia disorders have elevated numbers of erythroblasts in the bone marrow, but have reduced numbers of healthy erythrocytes circulating in the blood. Due to the problems with forming hemoglobin, many erythroblasts never make it into the blood stream as healthy erythrocytes.

        "Since erythroblasts need iron to make hemoglobin, we reasoned that the increased number of erythroblasts in thalassemia may send stronger messages to the liver to suppress hepcidin and thereby absorb more iron even in the condition of iron overload," says the study's lead author, Toshihiko Tanno, Ph.D., an investigator in Miller's laboratory in the NIDDK's Division of Intramural Research.

        With this hypothesis in mind, Dr. Tanno set out to identify all the messages that are produced by adult stem cells, as they become erythroblasts and red blood cells. For this work, the team was able to examine all the genes expressed in those cells because a catalogue of those genes now exists based upon the NIH's Human Genome Project. The authors identified growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) protein as being unusually elevated in people with thalassemia compared to healthy volunteers. Further study showed that GDF15 does indeed signal reduced hepcidin production in liver cells, and the study revealed additional erythroblast proteins that may be involved.

        "We are continuing the search for other factors that regulate expression of hepcidin," says Miller. "We are also keenly interested in determining if the elevated levels of GDF15 cause other problems in thalassemia in addition to hepcidin suppression."

        The team is now developing strategies to apply and translate their discovery into new diagnostic and therapeutic tools for the clinic. Drs. Miller and Tanno both agreed that while their discovery is a good start, the project will not be complete until the patients have benefited.


        SOURCE: National Institutes of Health




      E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague   To print, use this version






      All contents Copyright (c) 1995-2009 Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.



      The NTK initiative. Physicians helping physicians identify Need-To-Know science
         Feedback
      Please rate this article: Strongly DISAGREE...Strongly AGREE NTK logo
      Question 1 - Physicians need to become aware of this information as soon as possible. Question 2 - This information is likely to have an impact on the way physicians practice medicine.
      1
      2
      3
      4
      5
      6
      7
      Send