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  • 1
    ISSN: 1572-8773
    Keywords: Haemosiderin ; Ferritin ; Iron ; Rat liver
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary Haemosiderin has been isolated from siderosomes and ferritin from the cytosol of livers of rats iron-loaded by intraperitoneal injections of iron-dextran. Siderosomal haermosiderin, like ferritin, was shown by electron diffraction to contain iron mainly in the form of small particles of ferrihydrite (5Fe2O3 · 9H2O), with average particle diameter of 5.36±1.31 nm (SD), less than that of ferritin iron-cores (6.14±1.18 nm). Mössbauer spectra of both iron-storage complexes are also similar, except that the blocking temperature,T B, for haemosiderin (23 K) is lower than that of ferritin (35 K). These values are consistent with their differences in particle volumes assuming identical magnetic anisotropy constants. Measurements of P/Fe ratios by electron probe microanalysis showed the presence of phosphorus in rat liver haemosiderin, but much of it was lost on extensive dialysis. The presence of peptides reacting with anti-ferritin antisera and the similarities in the structures of their iron components are consistent with the view that rat liver haemosiderin arises by degradation of ferritin polypeptides, but its peptide pattern is different from that found in humanβ-thalassaemia haemosiderin. The blocking temperature, 35 K, for rat liver ferritin is near to that reported, 40 K, for humanβ-thalassaemia spleen ferritin. However, the haemosiderin isolated from this tissue, in contrast to that from rat liver, had aT B higher than that of ferritin. The iron availability of haemosiderins from rat liver and humanβ-thalassaemic spleen to a hydroxypyridinone chelator also differed. That from rat liver was equal to or greater, and that from human spleen was markedly less, than the iron availability from either of the associated ferritins, which were equivalent. The differences in properties of the two types of haemosiderin may reflect their origins from primary or secondary iron overload and differences in the duration of the overload.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1572-8773
    Keywords: Ferritin ; Siderotic mice ; Amino acid sequence ; L subunit
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary The major ferritin species of mouse liver has been resolved by SDS-PAGE into two bands similar to the H and L subunits of rat liver ferritin with the L subunit predominating. Amino acid sequencing has confirmed the major, faster-migrating component as L chain. An additional, electrophoretically fast, minor ferritin was isolated from siderosome-containing subcellular fractions. In denaturing gels it gave a single ‘F’ subunit band of about 17 kDa, significantly smaller than the L and H subunits (about 20 and 21 kDa respectively). A small fragment isolated from the fast ferritin was sequenced. It corresponds to a 19-residue C-terminal peptide cleaved from L subunits in the assembled molecules. The F subunit must be derived from L subunits by loss of this peptide, and is not the expression product of a different gene. ‘Fast’ ferritins of siderotic mice and rats are thus analogous.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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