Evidence for the multimeric structure of Ferroportin

Authors:
De Domenico I, Ward DM, Musci G, Kaplan J
In:
Source: Blood
Publication Date: (2007)
Issue: 109(5): 2205-9
Research Area:
Cancer Research/Cell Biology
Immunotherapy / Hematology
Cells used in publication:
293T
Species: human
Tissue Origin: kidney
Platform:
Nucleofector® I/II/2b
Abstract
Ferroportin (Fpn) (IREG1, SLC40A1, MTP1) is an iron transporter, and mutations in Fpn result in a genetically dominant form of iron overload disease. Previously, we demonstrated that Fpn is a multimer and that mutations in Fpn are dominant negative. Other studies have suggested that Fpn is not a multimer and that overexpression or epitope tags might affect the localization, topology, or multimerization of Fpn. We generated wild-type Fpn with 3 different epitopes, GFP, FLAG, and c-myc, and expressed these constructs in cultured cells. Co-expression of any 2 different epitope-tagged proteins in the same cell resulted in their quantitative coimmunoprecipitation. Treatment of Fpn-GFP/Fpn-FLAG-expressing cells with crosslinking reagents resulted in the crosslinking of Fpn-GFP and Fpn-FLAG. Western analysis of rat glioma C6 cells or mouse bone marrow macrophages exposed to crosslinking reagents showed that endogenous Fpn is a dimer. These results support the hypothesis that the dominant inheritance of Fpn-iron overload disease is due to the dominant-negative effects of mutant Fpn proteins.