Overexpression of HFE in HepG2 cells reveals differences in intracellular distribution and co-localization of wt- and mutated forms.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Liver is the primary target organ of Hereditary Hemochromatosis Type I, with the HFE mutations C282Y and H63D recognized as markers of this iron-overload disease. Hepatocytes are also the main site of synthesis of HFE. However, most early studies of overexpression of HFE were done in non-hepatic, non-HFE-expressing, cell lines. Here we report the setting up of a stable transfection model of wt- and mutant-HFE (H63D and C282Y) proteins in a hepatic cell line (HepG2), the analysis of its intracellular distribution and the effect of diferric transferrin on HFE localization. The C282Y mutant is retained in the ER, whereas HFE-wt and H63D co-localize with TfR1 exclusively in early recycling endosomes. Holotransferrin induces a re-localization of wt- and H63D-HFE, from early recycling endosomes to the cytoplasmic membrane. In conclusion our results establish the HepG2 cell line as a valuable model for the study of HFE.