Iron Load Toxicity in Medicine: From Molecular and Cellular Aspects to Clinical Implications.
George J KontoghiorghesPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Iron is essential for all organisms and cells. Diseases of iron imbalance affect billions of patients, including those with iron overload and other forms of iron toxicity. Excess iron load is an adverse prognostic factor for all diseases and can cause serious organ damage and fatalities following chronic red blood cell transfusions in patients of many conditions, including hemoglobinopathies, myelodyspasia, and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Similar toxicity of excess body iron load but at a slower rate of disease progression is found in idiopathic haemochromatosis patients. Excess iron deposition in different regions of the brain with suspected toxicity has been identified by MRI T2* and similar methods in many neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Based on its role as the major biological catalyst of free radical reactions and the Fenton reaction, iron has also been implicated in all diseases associated with free radical pathology and tissue damage. Furthermore, the recent discovery of ferroptosis, which is a cell death program based on free radical generation by iron and cell membrane lipid oxidation, sparked thousands of investigations and the association of iron with cardiac, kidney, liver, and many other diseases, including cancer and infections. The toxicity implications of iron in a labile, non-protein bound form and its complexes with dietary molecules such as vitamin C and drugs such as doxorubicin and other xenobiotic molecules in relation to carcinogenesis and other forms of toxicity are also discussed. In each case and form of iron toxicity, the mechanistic insights, diagnostic criteria, and molecular interactions are essential for the design of new and effective therapeutic interventions and of future targeted therapeutic strategies. In particular, this approach has been successful for the treatment of most iron loading conditions and especially for the transition of thalassemia from a fatal to a chronic disease due to new therapeutic protocols resulting in the complete elimination of iron overload and of iron toxicity.
Keyphrases
- iron deficiency
- oxidative stress
- prognostic factors
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- physical activity
- heart failure
- ejection fraction
- computed tomography
- peritoneal dialysis
- nitric oxide
- red blood cell
- drug delivery
- patient reported outcomes
- hydrogen peroxide
- left ventricular
- atrial fibrillation
- pulmonary embolism
- cancer therapy
- single molecule
- quality improvement
- gold nanoparticles
- electronic health record
- papillary thyroid
- cerebral ischemia
- drug induced