Author/Authors :
Elmar Aigner، نويسنده , , Thomas K. Felder، نويسنده , , Hannes Oberkofler، نويسنده , , Penelope Hahne، نويسنده , , Simon Auer، نويسنده , , Selma Soyal، نويسنده , , Andreas Stadlmayr، نويسنده , , Karin Schwenoha، نويسنده , , Christian Pirich، نويسنده , , Paul Hengster، نويسنده , , Christian Datz، نويسنده , , Wolfgang Patsch، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Mutual clinical and molecular interactions between iron and glucose metabolism have been reported. We aimed to investigate a potential effect of glucose on iron homeostasis. We found that serum iron concentrations gradually decreased over 180 min after the administration of 75 g of glucose from 109.8±45.4 mg/L to 94.4±40.4 mg/L (P<.001; N= 40) but remained unchanged in control subjects receiving tap water (N= 21). Serum hepcidin, the key iron regulatory hormone which is mainly derived from hepatocytes but also expressed in pancreatic β-cells, increased within 120 min after glucose ingestion from 19.7±9.9 nmol/L to 31.4±21.0 nmol/L (P<.001). In cell culture, glucose induced the secretion of hepcidin and insulin into the supernatant of INS-1E cultures, but did not change the amount of hepcidin detectable in the hepatocyte cell culture HepG2. We additionally confirmed the expression of hepcidin in a human islet cell preparation. These results suggest that glucose acts as a regulator of serum iron concentrations, most likely by triggering the release of hepcidin from β-cells.
Keywords :
Hepcidin , ?-Cell , Glucose , Serum iron