Rapidly Escalating Hepcidin and Associated Serum Iron Starvation Are Features of the Acute Response to Typhoid Infection in Humans.

Darton, Thomas C and Blohmke, Christoph J and Giannoulatou, Eleni and Waddington, Claire S and Jones, Claire and Sturges, Pamela and Webster, Craig and Drakesmith, Hal and Pollard, Andrew J and Armitage, Andrew E (2015) Rapidly Escalating Hepcidin and Associated Serum Iron Starvation Are Features of the Acute Response to Typhoid Infection in Humans. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 9 (9). pp. e0004029. ISSN 1935-2735 (Gold OA)

[thumbnail of Darton 2015 PLOS NTD _Hepcidin.pdf]
Preview
Text
Darton 2015 PLOS NTD _Hepcidin.pdf

Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Iron is a key pathogenic determinant of many infectious diseases. Hepcidin, the hormone responsible for governing systemic iron homeostasis, is widely hypothesized to represent a key component of nutritional immunity through regulating the accessibility of iron to invading microorganisms during infection. However, the deployment of hepcidin in human bacterial infections remains poorly characterized. Typhoid fever is a globally significant, human-restricted bacterial infection, but understanding of its pathogenesis, especially during the critical early phases, likewise is poorly understood. Here, we investigate alterations in hepcidin and iron/inflammatory indices following experimental human typhoid challenge.

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS

Fifty study participants were challenged with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi and monitored for evidence of typhoid fever. Serum hepcidin, ferritin, serum iron parameters, C-reactive protein (CRP), and plasma IL-6 and TNF-alpha concentrations were measured during the 14 days following challenge. We found that hepcidin concentrations were markedly higher during acute typhoid infection than at baseline. Hepcidin elevations mirrored the kinetics of fever, and were accompanied by profound hypoferremia, increased CRP and ferritin, despite only modest elevations in IL-6 and TNF-alpha in some individuals. During inflammation, the extent of hepcidin upregulation associated with the degree of hypoferremia.

CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE

We demonstrate that strong hepcidin upregulation and hypoferremia, coincident with fever and systemic inflammation, are hallmarks of the early innate response to acute typhoid infection. We hypothesize that hepcidin-mediated iron redistribution into macrophages may contribute to S. Typhi pathogenesis by increasing iron availability for macrophage-tropic bacteria, and that targeting macrophage iron retention may represent a strategy for limiting infections with macrophage-tropic pathogens such as S. Typhi.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Depositing User: Repository Administrator
Date Deposited: 03 Feb 2016 22:35
Last Modified: 22 Mar 2016 05:05
URI: https://eprints.victorchang.edu.au/id/eprint/292

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item