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"Receptors, Transferrin"
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Cryo-EM structure of the human ferritin–transferrin receptor 1 complex
2019
Human transferrin receptor 1 (CD71) guarantees iron supply by endocytosis upon binding of iron-loaded transferrin and ferritin. Arenaviruses and the malaria parasite exploit CD71 for cell invasion and epitopes on CD71 for interaction with transferrin and pathogenic hosts were identified. Here, we provide the molecular basis of the CD71 ectodomain-human ferritin interaction by determining the 3.9 Å resolution single-particle cryo-electron microscopy structure of their complex and by validating our structural findings in a cellular context. The contact surfaces between the heavy-chain ferritin and CD71 largely overlap with arenaviruses and
Plasmodium vivax
binding regions in the apical part of the receptor ectodomain. Our data account for transferrin-independent binding of ferritin to CD71 and suggest that select pathogens may have adapted to enter cells by mimicking the ferritin access gate.
The human transferrin receptor 1 (CD71) is a transmembrane protein responsible for iron uptake. Here the authors present the 3.9 Å resolution cryo-EM structure of the CD71 ectodomain-human ferritin (H-Ft) complex and find that H-Ft binds a CD71 region different from the transferrin one that overlaps with the surface recognized by select pathogens.
Journal Article
Transferrin receptors
2025
The transferrin receptor (TfR) is one of the key proteins involved in cellular iron uptake. TfR-mediated endocytosis of transferrin-bound iron is the major pathway for iron acquisition by most cells in the body. Over the past three decades, the studies on TfR have made significant progress, and also, our knowledge on cell iron uptake has greatly been improved. Here we focus on recent advances in the studies on TfR and a brief discussion of the structures and functions of four different types of TfR, namely TfR1 (transferrin receptor 1), TfR2 (transferrin receptor 2), TfR3 (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) and TfR4 (cubilin). These proteins work in different cells or organs and at different times, ensuring that cells and tissues get the iron they need. Their normal expression and function are fundamental to the body’s iron homeostasis.
Exploring the role of transferrin receptors in cellular iron homeostasis
Iron metabolism disorders affect many people worldwide, making it crucial to understand how the body manages iron. Here the authors review research on transferrin receptors (TfRs), which are proteins that help cells take in iron. The study focuses on four types of TfR: TfR1, TfR2, TfR3 and TfR4. TfR1 is the main receptor for iron uptake in most cells, especially red blood cells. It binds to transferrin and helps transport iron into cells. TfR2 is similar to TfR1 but plays a role in regulating hepcidin, a hormone that controls iron levels in the body. TfR3 and TfR4 are less understood but involved in rapid iron uptake during stress and in kidney function. The research highlights the importance of these receptors in maintaining iron balance. Future research could lead to new treatments for disorders caused by abnormal iron metabolism.
This summary was initially drafted using artificial intelligence, then revised and fact-checked by the author.
Journal Article
Cryo-EM structure of an essential Plasmodium vivax invasion complex
by
Menant, Sébastien
,
Cowman, Alan F.
,
Pearson, Richard D.
in
101/28
,
631/326/417/1716
,
631/535/1258/1259
2018
Plasmodium vivax
is the most widely distributed malaria parasite that infects humans
1
.
P. vivax
invades reticulocytes exclusively, and successful entry depends on specific interactions between the
P. vivax
reticulocyte-binding protein 2b (
Pv
RBP2b) and transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1)
2
. TfR1-deficient erythroid cells are refractory to invasion by
P. vivax
, and anti-
Pv
RBP2b monoclonal antibodies inhibit reticulocyte binding and block
P. vivax
invasion in field isolates
2
. Here we report a high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy structure of a ternary complex of
Pv
RBP2b bound to human TfR1 and transferrin, at 3.7 Å resolution. Mutational analyses show that
Pv
RBP2b residues involved in complex formation are conserved; this suggests that antigens could be designed that act across
P. vivax
strains. Functional analyses of TfR1 highlight how
P. vivax
hijacks TfR1, an essential housekeeping protein, by binding to sites that govern host specificity, without affecting its cellular function of transporting iron. Crystal and solution structures of
Pv
RBP2b in complex with antibody fragments characterize the inhibitory epitopes. Our results establish a structural framework for understanding how
P. vivax
reticulocyte-binding protein engages its receptor and the molecular mechanism of inhibitory monoclonal antibodies, providing important information for the design of novel vaccine candidates.
Structural studies show that conserved residues in
Plasmodium vivax
reticulocyte-binding protein 2b determine interactions with transferrin receptor 1 that are essential for host invasion, suggesting avenues for designing vaccines that work across
P. vivax
strains.
Journal Article
Disrupted iron homeostasis causes dopaminergic neurodegeneration in mice
by
Aryal, Dipendra K.
,
Wetsel, William
,
Matak, Andrija
in
Animals
,
Biological Sciences
,
Brain - metabolism
2016
Disrupted brain iron homeostasis is a common feature of neurodegenerative disease. To begin to understand how neuronal iron handling might be involved, we focused on dopaminergic neurons and asked how inactivation of transport proteins affected iron homeostasis in vivo in mice. Loss of the cellular iron exporter, ferroportin, had no apparent consequences. However, loss of transferrin receptor 1, involved in iron uptake, caused neuronal iron deficiency, age-progressive degeneration of a subset of dopaminergic neurons, and motor deficits. There was gradual depletion of dopaminergic projections in the striatum followed by death of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. Damaged mitochondria accumulated, and gene expression signatures indicated attempted axonal regeneration, a metabolic switch to glycolysis, oxidative stress, and the unfolded protein response. We demonstrate that loss of transferrin receptor 1, but not loss of ferroportin, can cause neurodegeneration in a subset of dopaminergic neurons in mice.
Journal Article
Transferrin Receptor-Targeted PEG-PLA Polymeric Micelles for Chemotherapy Against Glioblastoma Multiforme
by
Chen, Weilin
,
Di, Qianqian
,
Xiao, Yue
in
Animals
,
Antigens, CD
,
Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic - administration & dosage
2020
The safe and efficient delivery of chemotherapeutic agents is critical to glioma therapy. However, chemotherapy for glioma is extremely challenging because the blood-brain barrier (BBB) rigorously prevents drugs from reaching the tumor region.
TfR-T12 peptide-modified PEG-PLA polymer was synthesized to deliver paclitaxel (PTX) for glioma therapy. TfR was significantly expressed on brain capillary endothelial cells and glioma cells; therefore, TfR-T12 peptide-modified micelles can cross the BBB system and target glioma cells.
TfR-T12-PEG-PLA/PTX polymeric micelles (TfR-T12-PMs) could be absorbed rapidly by tumor cells, and traversed effectively the BBB monolayers. TfR-T12-PMs can effectively inhibit the proliferation of U87MG cells in vitro, and TfR-T12-PMs loaded with paclitaxel presented better antiglioma effect with prolonged median survival of nude mice-bearing glioma than the unmodified PMs.
The TfR-T12-PMs could effectively overcome the BBB barrier and accomplish glioma-targeted drug delivery, thus validating its potential in improving the therapeutic outcome in multiforme.
Journal Article
MACC1 regulates clathrin-mediated endocytosis and receptor recycling of transferrin receptor and EGFR in colorectal cancer
2021
Metastasis Associated in Colon Cancer 1 (MACC1) is a novel prognostic, predictive and causal biomarker for tumor progression and metastasis in many cancer types, including colorectal cancer. Besides its clinical value, little is known about its molecular function. Its similarity to SH3BP4, involved in regulating uptake and recycling of transmembrane receptors, suggests a role of MACC1 in endocytosis. By exploring the MACC1 interactome, we identified the clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME)-associated proteins CLTC, DNM2 and AP-2 as MACC1 binding partners. We unveiled a MACC1-dependent routing of internalized transferrin receptor towards recycling. Elevated MACC1 expression caused also the activation and internalization of EGFR, a higher rate of receptor recycling, as well as earlier and stronger receptor activation and downstream signaling. These effects are limited by deletion of CME-related protein interaction sites in MACC1. Thus, MACC1 regulates CME and receptor recycling, causing increased growth factor-mediated downstream signaling and cell proliferation. This novel mechanism unveils potential therapeutic intervention points restricting MACC1-driven metastasis.
Journal Article
A missense mutation in TFRC, encoding transferrin receptor 1, causes combined immunodeficiency
2016
Raif Geha, Louis Kunkel, Waleed Al-Herz and colleagues report a mutation in
TFRC
(encoding transferrin receptor 1, TfR1) that causes combined immunodeficiency characterized by impaired function of T and B cells in homozygous patients. Iron citrate rescued the lymphocyte defects in patient-derived cells and in a mouse model, demonstrating the importance of TfR1-mediated iron internalization in adaptive immunity.
Patients with a combined immunodeficiency characterized by normal numbers but impaired function of T and B cells had a homozygous p.Tyr20His substitution in transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1), encoded by
TFRC
. The substitution disrupts the TfR1 internalization motif, resulting in defective receptor endocytosis and markedly increased TfR1 expression on the cell surface. Iron citrate rescued the lymphocyte defects, and expression of wild-type but not mutant TfR1 rescued impaired transferrin uptake in patient-derived fibroblasts.
Tfrc
Y20H/Y20H
mice recapitulated the immunological defects of patients. Despite the critical role of TfR1 in erythrocyte development and function, patients had only mild anemia and only slightly increased TfR1 expression in erythroid precursors. We show that STEAP3, a metalloreductase expressed in erythroblasts, associates with TfR1 and partially rescues transferrin uptake in patient-derived fibroblasts, suggesting that STEAP3 may provide an accessory TfR1 endocytosis signal that spares patients from severe anemia. These findings demonstrate the importance of TfR1 in adaptive immunity.
Journal Article
Transferrin receptor targeting by de novo sheet extension
2021
The de novo design of polar protein–protein interactions is challenging because of the thermodynamic cost of stripping water away from the polar groups. Here, we describe a general approach for designing proteins which complement exposed polar backbone groups at the edge of beta sheets with geometrically matched beta strands. We used this approach to computationally design small proteins that bind to an exposed beta sheet on the human transferrin receptor (hTfR), which shuttles interacting proteins across the blood–brain barrier (BBB), opening up avenues for drug delivery into the brain. We describe a design which binds hTfR with a 20 nM K
d, is hyperstable, and crosses an in vitro microfluidic organ-on-a-chip model of the human BBB. Our design approach provides a general strategy for creating binders to protein targets with exposed surface beta edge strands.
Journal Article
Binding and uptake of H-ferritin are mediated by human transferrin receptor-1
by
Niemi, Eréne C
,
Björkman, Pamela J
,
Li, Li
in
Antigens, CD - genetics
,
Antigens, CD - metabolism
,
Apoferritins - metabolism
2010
Ferritin is a spherical molecule composed of 24 subunits of two types, ferritin H chain (FHC) and ferritin L chain (FLC). Ferritin stores iron within cells, but it also circulates and binds specifically and saturably to a variety of cell types. For most cell types, this binding can be mediated by ferritin composed only of FHC (HFt) but not by ferritin composed only of FLC (LFt), indicating that binding of ferritin to cells is mediated by FHC but not FLC. By using expression cloning, we identified human transferrin receptor-1 (TfR1) as an important receptor for HFt with little or no binding to LFt. In vitro, HFt can be precipitated by soluble TfR1, showing that this interaction is not dependent on other proteins. Binding of HFt to TfR1 is partially inhibited by diferric transferrin, but it is hindered little, if at all, by HFE. After binding of HFt to TfR1 on the cell surface, HFt enters both endosomes and lysosomes. TfR1 accounts for most, if not all, of the binding of HFt to mitogen-activated T and B cells, circulating reticulocytes, and all cell lines that we have studied. The demonstration that TfR1 can bind HFt as well as Tf raises the possibility that this dual receptor function may coordinate the processing and use of iron by these iron-binding molecules.
Journal Article
Increased brain uptake of targeted nanoparticles by adding an acid-cleavable linkage between transferrin and the nanoparticle core
2015
Most therapeutic agents are excluded from entering the central nervous system by the blood–brain barrier (BBB). Receptor mediated transcytosis (RMT) is a common mechanism used by proteins, including transferrin (Tf), to traverse the BBB. Here, we prepared Tf-containing, 80-nm gold nanoparticles with an acid-cleavable linkage between the Tf and the nanoparticle core to facilitate nanoparticle RMT across the BBB. These nanoparticles are designed to bind to Tf receptors (TfRs) with high avidity on the blood side of the BBB, but separate from their multidentate Tf–TfR interactions upon acidification during the transcytosis process to allow release of the nanoparticle into the brain. These targeted nanoparticles show increased ability to cross an in vitro model of the BBB and, most important, enter the brain parenchyma of mice in greater amounts in vivo after systemic administration compared with similar high-avidity nanoparticles containing noncleavable Tf. In addition, we investigated this design with nanoparticles containing high-affinity antibodies (Abs) to TfR. With the Abs, the addition of the acid-cleavable linkage provided no improvement to in vivo brain uptake for Ab-containing nanoparticles, and overall brain uptake was decreased for all Ab-containing nanoparticles compared with Tf-containing ones. These results are consistent with recent reports of high-affinity anti-TfR Abs trafficking to the lysosome within BBB endothelium. In contrast, high-avidity, Tf-containing nanoparticles with the acid-cleavable linkage avoid major endothelium retention by shedding surface Tf during their transcytosis.
Journal Article