Developing erythrocytes take up exceptionally large amounts of iron, which must be transferred to mitochondria for incorporation into heme. This massive iron flux must be precisely controlled to permit the coordinated synthesis of heme and hemoglobin while avoiding the toxic effects of chemically reactive iron. In cultured animal cells, iron chaperones
Moon-Suhn Ryu, Deliang Zhang, Olga Protchenko, Minoo Shakoury-Elizeh, Caroline C. Philpott
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Zebrafish as a model system to delineate the role of heme and iron metabolism during erythropoiesis
J Zhang, I Hamza |
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2018 |
The Role of NCOA4-Mediated Ferritinophagy in Health and Disease
N Santana-Codina, J Mancias |
Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) | 2018 |
Ferritin iron regulators, PCBP1 and NCOA4, respond to cellular iron status in developing red cells
MS Ryu, KA Duck, CC Philpott |
Blood cells, molecules & diseases | 2018 |
Crossing the Iron Gate: Why and How Transferrin Receptors Mediate Viral Entry
M Wessling-Resnick |
Annual Review of Nutrition | 2018 |
The flux of iron through ferritin in erythrocyte development:
CC Philpott |
Current Opinion in Hematology | 2018 |