- Hepcidin
Pfam_box
Symbol = Hepcidin
Name = Hepcidin
width =
caption =
Pfam= PF06446
InterPro= IPR010500
SMART=
Prosite =
SCOP = 1m4f
TCDB =
OPM family=
OPM protein= 1m4e
PDB=PDB3|1m4fA:60-84 PDB3|1m4eA:65-84protein
Name=hepcidin antimicrobial peptide
caption=
width=
HGNCid=15598
Symbol=HAMP
AltSymbols=
EntrezGene=57817
OMIM=606464
RefSeq=NM_021175
UniProt=P81172
PDB=
ECnumber=
Chromosome=19
Arm=q
Band=13.1
LocusSupplementaryData=Hepcidin is a recently discovered
peptide hormone produced by theliver , that appears to be the master regulator of iron homeostasis in humans and othermammal s. [Ganz T. [http://www.bloodjournal.org/cgi/content/full/102/3/783 Hepcidin, a key regulator of iron metabolism and mediator of anemia of inflammation. "Blood" 2003;102:783-788.] PMID 12663437.] "HAMP " is thegene that encodes for hepcidin.Function
Hepcidin directly inhibits
ferroportin , a protein that transports iron out of cells that store it. Thus, it maintainsiron homeostasis .Several mutations in hepcidin result in
juvenile hemochromatosis . The majority of juvenile hemochromatosis cases are due to mutations inhemojuvelin , a regulator of hepcidin production.Hepcidin has shown fairly consistent
antifungal activity. Hepcidin'santibacterial activity currently seems to be inconsistent. The current scientific evidence suggests that hepcidin is a central regulatory hormone and its main action is to regulate systemic iron homeostasis.History
The peptide that would later become known as hepcidin was first reported as LEAP-1, for Liver-Expressed Antimicrobial Protein [Krausse A. " [http://insert_link_when_NBCI_works_again LEAP-1 a novel highly disulphide-bonded human peptide, exhibits antimicrobial activity] " *note please insert citation, NCBI is down and has been for several minutes*] . Independently, in a search for
antimicrobial peptides , researchers working in the lab of Tomas Ganz discovered a peptide associated with inflammation, and named it "hepcidin" after observing that it was produced in the liver ("hep-") and appeared to have bacteriocidal properties ("-cidin" for "killing") [Park CH, Valore EV, Waring AJ, Ganz T." [http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/cgi/ijlink?linkType=ABST&journalCode=jbc&resid=276/11/7806 Hepcidin, a Urinary Antimicrobial Peptide Synthesized in the Liver.] " J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 276, Issue 11, 7806-7810, March 16, 2001] . Both groups were focused on the antimicrobial properties of the peptide.Soon after this discovery, researchers discovered that hepcidin production in mice increased in conditions of iron overload as well as in inflammation. Genetically modified mice engineered to overexpress hepcidin died shortly after birth with severe iron deficiency, again suggesting a central and not redundant role in iron regulation. The first evidence that linked hepcidin to the clinical condition known as the anemia of inflammation came from the lab of Nancy Andrews in Boston when researchers looked at tissue from two patients with liver
tumor s with a severemicrocytic anemia that did not respond to iron supplementation. The tumor tissue appeared to be overproducing hepcidin, and contained large quantities of hepcidin mRNA. Removing the tumors surgically cured the anemia.Taken together, these discoveries suggested that hepcidin regulated the release of iron in the body.
External links
*
*References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.