Iron Restriction Keeps Blood Stem Cells Young
"We've shown that this decline in HSC function is not inevitable and appears to be reversible," said study senior and co-corresponding author
An Unexpected Role for Iron in Blood Stem Cells
This research dates to 2018, when
After analyzing HSCs, the researchers found that excess intracellular iron activates inflammation within HSCs and pushes them towards dormancy—a state in which a cell's functions are massively slowed, similar to animal hibernation. Dormancy limits HSCs' ability to make more copies of themselves and to produce sufficient numbers of high-quality blood cells. Conversely, HSCs with restricted iron levels readily multiply and respond effectively when more blood components are needed.
"So basically, iron restriction governs and protects the regenerative capacity of stem cells—their ability to divide and to differentiate into blood cells," said the paper's co-corresponding author
By what mechanism does iron limitation maintain HSC health? In studies involving young mice, the researchers found that low iron triggers a molecular response in HSCs that temporarily increases fatty acid metabolism, strengthening genetic programs in HSCs after they've proliferated in young animals. By contrast, HSC in aged mice were found to contain increased iron levels that inhibited the activation of this newly discovered fatty-acid metabolism pathway.
The researchers next studied whether removing iron from HSCs would improve blood-cell production in old and aging mice. To reduce iron levels in HSCs, the team injected old mice with the iron chelator deferoxamine daily for 14 days. Compared with controls, aged HSCs exposed to iron chelation produced significantly more blood cells after their HSCs were transplanted into other mice. Longer-term iron chelation had an even more pronounced effect: When 6-month-old (middle-aged) mice were given an iron chelator for 13 additional months (well into old age), the animals' HSCs showed up to a 10-fold increase in regenerative capacity compared with controls.
Aging and Iron Intake
Since aging is widely associated with systemic iron deficiency, doctors often advise seniors to take iron supplements or eat more iron-rich foods. This supplemental iron lowers the risk of iron deficiency anemia, the source of numerous health issues. Those recommendations still hold,
"Our study's key finding—that chelators, by neutralizing iron loading inside HSCs, may enable HSCs to remain healthy into old age—is potentially important," said
The Cell Stem Cell paper is titled "An iron rheostat controls hematopoietic stem cell fate." In addition to
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SOURCE Albert Einstein College of Medicine
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