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Glutathione and the intracellular labile heme pool.

Rosemary O'KeeffeGladys Oluyemisi Latunde-DadaYu-Lin ChenXiaole L KongAgostino CilibrizziRobert C Hider
Published in: Biometals : an international journal on the role of metal ions in biology, biochemistry, and medicine (2020)
One candidate for the cytosolic labile iron pool is iron(II)glutathione. There is also a widely held opinion that an equivalent cytosolic labile heme pool exists and that this pool is important for the intracellular transfer of heme. Here we describe a study designed to characterise conjugates that form between heme and glutathione. In contrast to hydrated iron(II), heme reacts with glutathione, under aerobic conditions, to form the stable hematin-glutathione complex, which contains iron(III). Thus, glutathione is clearly not the cytosolic ligand for heme, indeed we demonstrate that the rate of heme degradation is enhanced in the presence of glutathione. We suggest that the concentration of heme in the cytosol is extremely low and that intracellular heme transfer occurs via intracellular membrane structures. Should any heme inadvertently escape into the cytosol, it would be rapidly conjugated to glutathione thereby protecting the cell from the toxic effects of heme.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • magnetic resonance
  • stem cells
  • reactive oxygen species
  • drug delivery
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • photodynamic therapy
  • bone marrow
  • iron deficiency