Cancer cell death induced by ferritins and the peculiar role of their labile iron pool

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Abstract

Cellular uptake of human H-ferritin loaded with 50 or 350 iron ions results in significant cytotoxicity on HeLa cells at submicromolar concentrations. Conversely, Horse Spleen Ferritin, that can be considered a model of L-cages, as it contains only about 10% of H subunits, even when loaded with 1000 iron ions, is toxic only at >1 order of magnitude higher protein concentrations. We propose here that the different cytotoxicity of the two ferritin cages originates from the presence in H-ferritin of a pool of non-biomineralized iron ions bound at the ferroxidase catalytic sites of H-ferritin subunits. This iron pool is readily released during the endosomal-mediated H-ferritin internalization.

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Cutrin, J. C., Alberti, D., Bernacchioni, C., Ciambellotti, S., Turano, P., Luchinat, C., … Aime, S. (2018). Cancer cell death induced by ferritins and the peculiar role of their labile iron pool. Oncotarget, 9(46), 27974–27984. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.25416

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