Implications of the Cardiac Hepcidin/Ferroportin axis for the Management of Iron Deficiency in Heart Failure

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Physiology Anatomy and Genetics

Abstract

Iron is essential for life. It is required not only for the synthesis of haemoglobin, which carries oxygen around our bodies, but also for the function of the enzymes that generate energy inside our cells. Indeed, iron deficiency reduces exercise capacity, even when haemoglobin levels are normal. At the same time, too much iron within the cells is toxic because it promotes the production of damaging oxidants. Therefore, the control of iron levels is essential for the healthy functioning of our tissues.
Tissues get their iron from the blood. Iron in the blood comes from three different sources; the spleen where iron is recycled from old blood cells, the liver where iron is stored, and the gut where iron is absorbed from the diet. Iron is exported from these organs into the blood by an iron-exporting protein called ferroportin. When iron levels in the blood get too high, the liver produces a hormone called hepcidin that blocks ferroportin so that blood iron levels return to normal. Inflammation also stimulates the production of hepcidin. Because of this, many patients with inflammatory conditions like heart disease and kidney disease have too much hepcidin in their blood. This inhibits the absorption of iron from the gut and causes iron to be locked inside the liver and the spleen. This is why many patients with chronic conditions have low iron levels in the blood and are described as "iron-deficient".
In recent years, studies in these patients have shown that this iron deficiency worsens heart failure and increases mortality. There are now many efforts directed at finding the best way to treat this iron deficiency. Giving these patients oral iron does not work because iron absorption in the gut is blocked by hepcidin. A new treatment involving direct infusion of iron into the blood (by intravenous means) has been developed and rolled out to treat iron deficiency in patients with heart disease.
In the past 5 years, work in my lab has discovered that heart cells use ferroprotin to control the amount of iron inside them. When we made mice that lacked ferroportin just in the heart, but had intact ferroportin in the gut, spleen and liver, these mice developed fatal heart failure because of too much iron being retained in heart cells. Like ferroportin at other sites, ferroportin in the heart can also be blocked by hepcidin. Based on this discovery, we hypothesise that high levels of hepcidin in patients also block ferroportin in heart cells, causing iron to be retained in the heart. When iron availability in the blood is low, this iron retention could protect the heart from becoming iron-depleted. However, when iron availability in the blood is high, especially after intravenous iron infusion, this retention could cause toxic iron accumulation in the heart.
The aim of the research is to test this hypothesis. We will do this using both a mouse model of heart failure and human samples. The research will be conducted at the University of Oxford by my team in collaboration with clinicians who study and treat iron deficiency in heart failure patients.
If our studies show that our hypothesis is true, then they will change how clinicians treat iron deficiency in heart failure patients who have raised hepcidin. One possible change is to give these patients compounds that lower hepcidin first (these are already being tested in clinical trials for other conditions). The advantage of lowering hepcidin is that it corrects iron deficiency in the blood (by unblocking ferroportin in the gut, liver and spleen) and also restores the ability of heart cells to control their iron levels and avoid iron toxicity (by unblocking ferroportin in the heart).

Technical Summary

Iron deficiency (ID) is a recently-recognised co-morbidity in chornic heart failure (CHF), and new guidelines recommend using I.V iron to treat it. These guidelines do not distinguish between different types of ID. One type of ID, most common in chronic conditions, is driven by raised levels of the hormone hepcidin. Hepcidin is raised by inflammation and causes ID by blocking the iron exporter ferroportin FPN in the liver and spleen, respective sites of iron storage and recycling. My lab has recently discovered new functions for hepcidin and FPN in the control of iron export within cardiomyocytes and demonstrated that this control is required for normal heart function. This discovery has important implications. First, raised hepcidin levels affect heart function directly by increasing cardiomyocyte iron retention and maginifying the impact of I.V iron on myocardial iron levels. Second, patients with raised hepcidin levels would benefit from a hepcidin-lowering approach to restore both serum iron levels and normal cardiac iron control.

Aims- 1)To establish the direct effects of raised hepcidin on cardiac iron and function in the setting of heart failure, 2) Identify and target the factors that raise hepcidin in this setting, 3) Determine if serum hepcidin levels modify the outcomes of I.V iron treatment.

Methodology- We will combine mechanistic experiments in an established mouse model of CHF with targeted sub-studies within a relevant patient cohort.

Scientific & medical opportunities- Our studies will generate new mechanistic understanding of the role of raised hepcidin in the pathophysiology of CHF. One clinical application of this understanding is to use hepcidin-lowering drugs to restore both serum iron levels and normal cardiac iron control. FPN is also present in the kidney and lung. The tools and understanding generated by our work will pave the way for studying the role of local iron retention in the chronic conditions that affect these tissues.
 
Description Chemitry in Cells- Imaging labile iron in-vivo
Amount £30,000 (GBP)
Funding ID http://chemistry-in-cells.chem.ox.ac.uk/ 
Organisation Wellcome Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 05/2022 
End 04/2024
 
Description High-throughput imaging platform for probing acute hypoxic sensing in a physiologically-relevant model of pulmonary vascular smooth muscle
Amount £9,885 (GBP)
Funding ID 0011384 
Organisation University of Oxford 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2022 
End 02/2023
 
Description Magnetic Resonance Imaging to establish the kinetics of iron uptake into the heart following intravenous iron replacement therapy: A feasibility study
Amount £36,368 (GBP)
Funding ID HSR00031 
Organisation University of Oxford 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2021 
End 07/2023
 
Description Research Excellence (round 3)
Amount £6,000,000 (GBP)
Funding ID RE/18/3/34214 
Organisation British Heart Foundation (BHF) 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2019 
End 03/2024
 
Description Characterisation of iron-associated cardiac dysfunction at the subcellular level 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have provided cardiac tissues from genetically altered animals, that harbour mutations in iron-regulatory genes.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborator has characterised the site of iron deposition within the cardiac tisssue.
Impact The collaboration has produced a number of research outcomes, some of which have been included in the recent PNAS paper, and presented at the European Iron Club Meeting in September 2014.
Start Year 2014
 
Description EFFECT OF IL-6 ANTAGONISM ON HEPCIDIN IN ACUTE HEART FAILURE-ASSAIL-LI trial 
Organisation University of Oslo
Country Norway 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our team will investigate whether Tocilizumab (an IL-6 receptor antagonist) prevents the rise in hepcidin following heart failure, and the extend to which this contributes to observed benefits.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators will provide access to plasma samples and relevant clinical data from the ASSAIL-MI trial.
Impact This collaboration is at the data collection stage
Start Year 2022
 
Description HEPCIDIN AND IRON HOMEOSTASIS IN ACUTE HEART FAILURE- OXFORD ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION OXAMI 
Organisation University of Oxford
Department Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our team will investigate changes in hepcidin and other iron homeostatic markers in the acute and chronic stages of heart failure, in order to gain greater understanding of the mechanisms that drive iron deficiency in patients, and the contribution thereof to clinical outcomes.
Collaborator Contribution Collaboration with OxAMI investigators has given us access to a large cohort of blood samples from the acute and chronic stages of heart failure, and associated clinical data, including MRI data on heart function.
Impact Data are currently in analysis stage.
Start Year 2021
 
Description IMPACT OF HEPCIDIN ON RESPONSE TO INTRAVENOUS IRON SUPPLEMENTATION IN CHRONIC HEART FAILURE PATIENTS- IRONMAN TRIAL 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our team will investigate the modifying effect of baseline hepcidin on the clinical outcomes of intravenous iron treatment in patients with heart failure.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators are providing access to samples from IRONMAN trial.
Impact This collaboration is to enter the data collection stage.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Imaging Intravenous Iron PID16038 
Organisation University of Oxford
Department Oxford Centre for Magnetic Resonance
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are running a clinical study using MRI to investigate iron uptake into tissues in the hours and days post intravenous iron replacement therapies. The study's target enrollment is 12 . So far, 9 participants have completed the study. We are measuring tissue uptake into the liver, heart, kidneys, spleen and skeletal muscle.
Collaborator Contribution MRI expertise, particularly T2* relaxometry for estimating tissue iron
Impact Results are currently being collected
Start Year 2022
 
Description Investigating hepcidin in procine model of ischemia reperfusion injury 
Organisation Erasmus MC
Country Netherlands 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution The collaborations seeks to explore changes in iron-regulated gene expression in the hours and days post cardiac ischemia reperfusion inury using a porcine model.
Collaborator Contribution porcine model
Impact results currently being collected
Start Year 2023
 
Description MECHANISMS OF IRON DEFICIENCY IN CHRONIC HEART FAILURE- HULL-LIFE COHORT 
Organisation University of Hull
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our team's aim is to identify the factors that drive iron deficiency anaemia in patients over the course of heart failure.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators have provided access to longitudinal samples from 700 heart failure patients.
Impact We are currently at the data acquisition stage
Start Year 2022
 
Description Skeletal muscle iron homeostasis in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction 
Organisation University of Leeds
Department stage@leeds
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The collaboration seeks to investigate how iron homeostasis is altered in muscle of patients with HFrEF, in order to explore the potential role of iron in skeletal muscle impairment.
Collaborator Contribution Muscle samples
Impact Results currently being collected
Start Year 2022
 
Description European Iron Club meeting 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact I gave a talk on the importance of iron homeostasis in cardiovscaular health
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://web.cvent.com/event/6d7f8f9b-8a91-41df-a30d-1537efe26a32/summary
 
Description Invited talk at the meeting of the European Hematology Association 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact I gave a talk on the role of iron deficiency in heart failure
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://ehaweb.org/congress/previous-congresses/eha2022-hybrid/eha2022-congress/