Autosomal-dominant hemochromatosis is associated with a mutation in the ferroportin (SLC11A3) gene.

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Citation

Montosi G, Donovan A, Totaro A, Garuti C, Pignatti E, Cassanelli S, Trenor CC, Gasparini P, Andrews NC, Pietrangelo A

Autosomal-dominant hemochromatosis is associated with a mutation in the ferroportin (SLC11A3) gene.

J Clin Invest. 2001 Aug;108(4):619-23. doi: 10.1172/JCI13468.

PubMed ID
11518736 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Hemochromatosis is a progressive iron overload disorder that is prevalent among individuals of European descent. It is usually inherited in an autosomal-recessive pattern and associated with missense mutations in HFE, an atypical major histocompatibility class I gene. Recently, we described a large family with autosomal-dominant hemochromatosis not linked to HFE and distinguished by early iron accumulation in reticuloendothelial cells. Through analysis of a large pedigree, we have determined that this disease maps to 2q32. The gene encoding ferroportin (SLC11A3), a transmembrane iron export protein, lies within a candidate interval defined by highly significant lod scores. We show that the iron-loading phenotype in autosomal-dominant hemochromatosis is associated with a nonconservative missense mutation in the ferroportin gene. This missense mutation, converting alanine to aspartic acid at residue 77 (A77D), was not seen in samples from 100 unaffected control individuals. We propose that partial loss of ferroportin function leads to an imbalance in iron distribution and a consequent increase in tissue iron accumulation.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Solute carrier family 40 member 1Q9NP59Details