Identification of an intestinal heme transporter
- PMID: 16143108
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2005.06.025
Identification of an intestinal heme transporter
Abstract
Dietary heme iron is an important nutritional source of iron in carnivores and omnivores that is more readily absorbed than non-heme iron derived from vegetables and grain. Most heme is absorbed in the proximal intestine, with absorptive capacity decreasing distally. We utilized a subtractive hybridization approach to isolate a heme transporter from duodenum by taking advantage of the intestinal gradient for heme absorption. Here we show a membrane protein named HCP 1 (heme carrier protein 1), with homology to bacterial metal-tetracycline transporters, mediates heme uptake by cells in a temperature-dependent and saturable manner. HCP 1 mRNA was highly expressed in duodenum and regulated by hypoxia. HCP 1 protein was iron regulated and localized to the brush-border membrane of duodenal enterocytes in iron deficiency. Our data indicate that HCP 1 is the long-sought intestinal heme transporter.
Comment in
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The intestinal heme transporter revealed.Cell. 2005 Sep 9;122(5):649-51. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2005.08.027. Cell. 2005. PMID: 16143096 Review.
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