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Research Article

Hemin uptake and release by neurons and glia

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Pages 200-205 | Received 21 Aug 2013, Accepted 22 Oct 2013, Published online: 19 Nov 2013
 

Abstract

Hemin accumulates in intracerebral hematomas and may contribute to cell injury in adjacent tissue. Despite its relevance to hemorrhagic CNS insults, very little is known about hemin trafficking by neural cells. In the present study, hemin uptake and release were quantified in primary murine cortical cultures, and the effect of the hemin-binding compound deferoxamine (DFO) was assessed. Net uptake of 55Fe-hemin was similar in mixed neuron-glia, neuron, and glia cultures, but was 2.6–3.6-fold greater in microglia cultures. After washout, 40–60% of the isotope signal was released by mixed neuron-glia cultures into albumin-containing medium within 24 h. Inhibiting hemin breakdown with tin protoporphyrin IX (SnPPIX) had minimal effect, while release of the fluorescent hemin analog zinc mesoporphyrin was quantitatively similar to that of 55Fe-hemin. Isotope was released most rapidly by neurons (52.2 ± 7.2% at 2 h), compared with glia (15.6 ± 1.3%) and microglia (17.6 ± 0.54%). DFO did not alter 55Fe-hemin uptake, but significantly increased its release. Mixed cultures treated with 10 μM hemin for 24 h sustained widespread neuronal loss that was attenuated by DFO. Concomitant treatment with SnPPIX had no effect on either enhancement of isotope release by DFO or neuroprotection. These results suggest that in the presence of a physiologic albumin concentration, hemin uptake by neural cells is followed by considerable extracellular release. Enhancement of this release by DFO may contribute to its protective effect against hemin toxicity.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no declarations of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NS079500, NS074289) to R.F.R. The authors have no financial or consulting interests which could influence this work.

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