Mechanisms for the shuttling of plasma non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) onto deferoxamine by deferiprone
Received 24 March 2010; received in revised form 29 April 2010; accepted 1 May 2010. published online 31 May 2010.
In iron overload conditions, plasma contains non-transferrin bound iron species, collectively referred to as plasma NTBI. These include iron citrate species, some of which are protein bound. Because NTBI is taken into tissues susceptible to iron loading, its removal by chelation is desirable but only partial using standard deferoxamine (DFO) therapy. Speciation plots suggest that, at clinically achievable concentrations, deferiprone (DFP) will shuttle iron onto DFO to form feroxamine (FO), but whether NTBI chelation by DFO is enhanced to therapeutically relevant rates by DFP is unknown. As FO is highly stable, kinetic measurements of FO formation by high-performance liquid chromatography or by stopped-flow spectrometry are achievable. In serum from thalassemia major patients supplemented with 10 μM DFO, FO formation paralleled NTBI removal but never exceeded 50% of potentially available NTBI; approximately one third of NTBI was chelated rapidly but only 15% of the remainder at 20 h. Addition of DFP increased the magnitude of the slower component, with increments in FO formation equivalent to complete NTBI removal by 8 h. This shuttling effect was absent in serum from healthy control subjects, indicating no transferrin iron removal. Studies with iron citrate solutions also showed biphasic chelation by DFO, the slow component being accelerated by the addition of DFP, with optimal enhancement at 30 μM. Physiological concentrations of albumin also enhanced DFO chelation from iron citrate, and the co-addition of DFP further accelerated this effect. We conclude that at clinically relevant concentrations, DFP enhances plasma NTBI chelation with DFO by rapidly accessing and shuttling NTBI fractions that are otherwise only slowly available to DFO.
aDepartment of Hematology, University College London Medical School, London, United Kingdom
bSchool of Pharmacy and Chemistry, Kingston University, Kingston, United Kingdom
cThe Department of Pharmacy, King's College London, London, United Kingdom
dThe National Institute for Medical Research, The Ridgeway, Mill Hill, London, United Kingdom
Reprint requests: Patricia Evans, Department of Hematology, University College London, The Cancer Institute, Paul O'Gorman Building, Huntley Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
This article is dedicated to the memory of the late Dr John Eccleston.