Haematologica, Vol 93, Issue 1, 111-115 doi:10.3324/haematol.11656
Copyright © 2008 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Anemia in β-thalassemia patients targets hepatic hepcidin transcript levels independently of iron metabolism genes controlling hepcidin expression
Emilie Camberlein1,
Giuliana Zanninelli2,
Lénaïck Détivaud1,
Anna Rita Lizzi2,
Francesco Sorrentino2,
Stefania Vacquer4,
Marie-Bérengère Troadec1,
Emanuele Angelucci3,
Emmanuelle Abgueguen1,
Olivier Loréal1,
Paolo Cianciulli2,
Maria Eliana Lai4,
Pierre Brissot1,
1 Inserm U-522, IFR 140, University Hospital Pontchaillou, Rennes, France
2 Ospedale San Eugenio, Day Hospital Talassemie, Rome, Italy
3 Ospedale Oncologico, Divisione di Ematologia, Cagliari, Italy
4 Ospedale Regionale per le Microcitemie, Centro Talassemici Adulti, Dipartimento Scienze Mediche, Università degli Studi di Cagliari, Italy
Correspondence: Pierre Brissot, Service des Maladies du Foie, Hôpital Pontchaillou 35033 Rennes Cedex, France. E-mail: pierre.brissot{at}univ-rennes1.fr

ABSTRACT
Thalassemia associates anemia and iron overload, two opposite
stimuli regulating hepcidin gene expression. We characterized
hepatic hepcidin expression in 10 thalassemia major and 13 thalassemia
intermedia patients. Hepcidin mRNA levels were decreased in
the thalassemia intermedia group which presented both lower
hemoglobin and higher plasma soluble transferrin receptor levels.
There was no relationship between hepcidin mRNA levels and those
of genes controlling iron metabolism, including HFE, hemojuvelin,
transferrin receptor-2 and ferroportin. These results underline
the role of erythropoietic activity on hepcidin decrease in
thalassemic patients and suggest that mRNA modulations of other
studied genes do not have a significant impact.
Key words: anemia, β-thalassemia, hepcidin, gene expression, iron overload.

Introduction
β-thalassemia includes thalassemia intermedia (TI) and
thalassemia major (TM). TM patients usually present more severe
anemia requiring frequent blood transfusions compared with TI.
1 This extra iron, added to that provided by hemolysis, results
in the development of secondary iron overload. In addition,
despite hepatic iron overload, gastrointestinal iron hyper-absorption
persists in anemic thalassemic patients, further contributing
to iron burden.
2 Hepcidin, mainly synthesized by the liver,
3 is a key regulator of iron metabolism controlling iron release
from reticuloendothelial and intestinal epithelial cells.
4 It
is induced by inflammation
5 or iron overload.
3 By contrast,
hypoxia and anemia reduce hepcidin expression and may favour
iron release and availability.
6 A decrease of urinary hepcidin
has been reported in thalassemic patients
7,8 and was well correlated
with hepatic hepcidin mRNA expression levels.
9 Experiments on
C57Bl/6 Hbb
th3/th3 mice, a murine model of thalassemia major,
confirm these findings.
10 Erythropoietic activity is considered
to be the main driver of hepcidin expression.
11,12 Beside hepcidin
(HAMP), HFE, hemojuvelin (HJV), transferrin receptor 2 (TfR2)
and ferroportin (FPN) genes play an important role in the regulation
of iron metabolism. Their mutations lead to various forms of
chronic iron overload in humans,
13 most of which implicate downstream
hepcidin deficiency. Our aim was to evaluate the respective
roles of iron load, anemia and genes controlling iron metabolism
on hepcidin mRNA expression during β-thalassemia.

Design and Methods
Patients
Twenty-three β-thalassemic patients [10 major (TM) and
13 intermedia (TI)] were compared with 10 control patients without
iron overload. The study was approved by the local ethics committees
and informed consent was given by patients. Control patients
had undergone surgery for hepatic tumors, mainly liver metastasis.
Histologic examination of their livers did not show any significant
hepatic failure, fibrosis, cirrhosis or iron excess. Control
hepatic samples used in this study were obtained from hepatic
resection pieces and provided by the Biological Resources Centre
of Rennes. Only the nontumoral parts of the liver biopsies were
used for gene expression analysis. Liver biopsies of thalassemic
patients were performed for diagnostic purposes. TM patients
started transfusion therapy in the first year of life and underwent
different iron chelation therapies (deferoxamine or deferiprone
or combined therapy). All TM and 4 TI were seropositive for
hepatitis C virus. Total number of transfusions ranged from
3 to 340 units. All patients had been splenectomized.

Methods
Clinical laboratory studies
Clinical treatment and laboratory assays were routinely performed
at the San Eugenio Hospital (Rome, Italy) and Ospedale Regionale
per le Microcitemie, Centro Talassemici Adulti (Cagliari, Italy)
for thalassemic patients, and at the University Hospital Pontchaillou
(Rennes, France) for control patients. Soluble transferrin receptor
(sTFR) assay was performed using IDeA
® sTfR-IT assay (Orion
Diagnostic, Finland).
Quantitative RT-PCR
PCR reactions were performed using qPCR-Core-kit and 18S Genomic control kit FAM-TAMRA for HAMP and MasterMix Plus for SybRGreen for FPN, HFE, HJV, TfR2, ceruloplasmin (CP), C-reactive protein (CRP) and 18S according to the manufacturer's instructions (Eurogentec®, Seraing, Belgium). Primer sequences are available upon request. The PCR was run on ABI PRISM 7000 sequence detection system (Applied Bioscience, London, United Kingdom).
Statistical analysis
The statistical analysis was performed on Statview software (SAS institute, Cary, NC, USA) using non-parametric tests including Mann-Whitney, Kruskall Wallis and Spearman. A p less than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.

Results and Discussion
Anemia and erythropoietic demand alter hepatic hepcidin m-RNA expression in thalassemia
In agreement with previous reports, we showed a decrease in
hepcidin mRNA expression in the liver of thalassemic patients.
7,9 However, in our study, only in TI patients were hepcidin mRNA
levels found to be significantly decreased compared with TM
and control patients (
Table 1). Iron overload was equivalent
in both thalassemic groups as indicated by their similar HIC,
ferritin and transferrin saturation values (
Table 1) and there
was no correlation between hepcidin mRNA levels and serum iron
parameters. In addition, a negative correlation between hepcidin
mRNA level and hepatic iron concentration was found (
Figure 1A).
Taken together, these data suggest that, in thalassemia, iron
overload is not a dominant signal controlling hepcidin mRNA
expression. Hemoglobin levels were lower in TM than in controls
and also significantly lower in TI versus TM (
Table 1). They
were positively correlated to hepcidin mRNA levels (
Figure 1B).
Furthermore, sTfR, reflecting erythropoietic activity,
14 was
higher in TI than in controls (
Table 1). Therefore, hemoglobin
and increased erythropoietic activity status seem to be the
dominant regulatory signals for hepcidin expression in thalassemia,
as compared with the extent of body iron excess. This hypothesis
was put forward in several recent works on mouse thalassemic
models
15 and manipulated erythropoietic activity.
11,12 The potential
role of GDF 15 (
Growth Differentiation Factor 15),
16 and/or
HIF (
Hypoxia inducible factor) has also been strongly put forward.
17 The lack of a significant decrease in hepcidin mRNA levels in
our TM patients could therefore appear unexpected, since the
TM phenotype is known to induce more severe anemia and iron
overload than TI. Furthermore, Kattamis
et al.9 found the ratio
between urinary hepcidin and ferritin was significantly decreased
in TM patients compared with controls and hepcidin mRNA expression
of these TM patients was found to correlate positively with
hemoglobin values. However, these discrepancies could be because:
(i) the distinction between TI and TM remains difficult to define;
1 (ii) the therapeutic schedule (chelation-transfusion) is not
fully standardized, and may generate variable modifications
in iron burden between different sets of patients; (iii) our
patients were older than those of Kattamis
et al.
9 In a report
by Kearney
et al.,
7 the lower urinary hepcidin levels in TI
compared with TM were explained by higher ferritin values in
TM versus TI. However, as mentioned previously, this was not
observed in our series (
Table 1).
Differences in hepcidin mRNA levels between TI and TM groups
were not related to changes in inflammatory status since there
was no difference in CP and CRP levels between the two groups
(
Table 1). In addition, the slight increase of CRP mRNA levels
found in controls was not associated either with an increase
in the mRNA levels coding CP, another acute phase protein, suggesting
that there was no significant difference in inflammatory status
between the three groups, or with a change in hepcidin levels
in TM. Altogether, these observations reinforce the hypothesis
that the erythropoietic drive plays an important role in hepcidin
mRNA expression in thalassemia, regardless of the confounding
factors, including the extent of iron overload and inflammation.
However, the possible role of splenectomy, which was performed
in all thalassemic patients, remains open to debate.
Expression of other iron metabolism genes during thalassemia
Correlations between HJV or TfR2 and hepcidin expression levels have already been found in different types of iron overload.10,18 HFE, TfR2 and HJV, mutated in different forms of hemochromatosis with hepcidin defect,13 are thought to play a regulatory role on hepcidin expression. In this study, we found no correlation between these genes and hepcidin mRNA levels (Table 2) suggesting that these mRNA levels probably have no major impact on hepcidin expression during this disease. Furthermore, ferroportin, HFE, hemojuvelin and TfR2 mRNA levels were well correlated in the control group, except for TfR2 versus ferroportin (Table 2). These correlations were maintained in thalassemic groups (mixed or individualized) (Table 2) supporting the theory of an independent regulation of these genes in β-thalassemia disorders. However, we cannot exclude the possible effect of a putative translational regulation on the expression level of these genes, especially for the TfR2 gene product which has been reported to be stabilized by holotransferrin.19 Nevertheless, we found a slight increase of HFE mRNA expression in TI compared with controls (Table 1). This was also reported in a study using a mouse model of thalassemia.10 However, this was confirmed for the TM (C57Bl/6 Hbbth3/th3) but not for the TI (Hbbth3/+) mice. Furthermore, there was a significant decrease in TfR2 mRNA expression in the liver of these TM mice, which was not observed in our study (Table 1). These differences between mouse beta-thalassemic models and human patients could be related to species differences or to the role of environmental factors. There has been no previous report describing a decrease in hepatic ferroportin mRNA level in TM patients. In our study, this decrease was confirmed (Table 1). In addition, no relationship between ferroportin mRNA expression and hemoglobin levels in thalassemia was seen (data not shown). An increase in duodenal ferroportin mRNA levels was reported by Gardenghi et al.15 in a thalassemia mouse model. However, other experiments in mice, with manipulated erythropoietic activity, did not show any change in hepatic ferroportin mRNA.11 So far, these different findings have made it difficult to identify any possible involvement of ferroportin in the phenotypic expression of thalassemia. In addition, we cannot exclude the possibility of a ferroportin translational regulatory mechanism related to the IRE/IRP system which has been previously reported in other conditions.20 In conclusion, our study supports the views that the erythropoietic drive is stronger than iron overload for regulating hepcidin expression and does not seem to act through a regulation of HFE, HJV or TfR2 gene expression, and that the regulation of the non-hepcidin iron related genes is relatively independent of the underlying thalassemic disease.

Footnotes
Authorship and Disclosures
EC: conception and design, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation, drafting article; GZ: conception and design, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation, text revision; LD; conception and design, analysis and interpretation, text revision; ARL, FS, SV: acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation; M-BT: analysis and interpretation, text revision; EA: acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation, text revision; EAb; analysis and interpretation, text revision; OL: conception and design, analysis and interpretation, text revision; PC: conception and design, analysis and interpretation, text revision; MEL: conception and design, analysis and interpretation, text revision; PB: conception and design, analysis and interpretation, text revision.
Funding: this work was supported by the Région Bretagne (PRIR 139), the Association Fer et Foie and by the LSHM-CT-2006-037296 European Community Grant.
Received for publication April 27, 2007.
Accepted for publication October 18, 2007.

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