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Iron-Deficiency and Estrogen Are Associated With Ischemic Stroke by Up-Regulating Transferrin to Induce Hypercoagulability
author: Tang X, Fang M, Cheng R, Zhang Z, Wang Y, Shen C, Han Y, Lu Q, Du Y, Liu Y, Sun Z, Zhu L, Mwangi J, Xue M, Long C, Lai R
Abstract: Rationale: Epidemiologic studies have identified an associate between iron deficiency (ID) and the use of oral contraceptives (CC) and ischemic stroke (IS). To date, however, the underlying mechanism remains poorly understood. Both ID and CC have been demonstrated to up-regulate the level and iron-binding ability of transferrin, with our recent study showing that this up-regulation can induce hypercoagulability by potentiating FXIIa/thrombin and blocking antithrombin-coagulation proteases interactions. Objective: To investigate whether transferrin mediates IS associated with ID or CC and the underlying mechanisms. Methods and Results:Transferrin levels were assayed in the plasma of IS patients with a history of iron-deficiency anemia (IDA), IDA patients, venous thromboembolism patients using CC, and ID mice, and in the cerebrospinal fluid of some IS patients. Effects of ID and estrogen administration on transferrin expression and coagulability and the underlying mechanisms were studied in vivo and in vitro. High levels of transferrin and transferrin-thrombin/FXIIa complexes were found in patients and ID mice. Both ID and estrogen up-regulated transferrin through hypoxia and estrogen response elements located in the transferrin gene enhancer and promoter regions, respectively. In addition, ID, administration of exogenous transferrin or estrogen, and transferrin overexpression promoted platelet-based thrombin generation and hypercoagulability, and thus aggravated IS. In contrast, anti-transferrin antibodies, transferrin knockdown, and peptide inhibitors of transferrin-thrombin/FXIIa interaction exerted anti-IS effects in vivo. Conclusions: Our findings revealed that certain factors (i.e., ID and CC) up-regulating transferrin are risk factors of thromboembolic diseases decipher a previously unrecognized mechanistic association among ID, CC and IS and provide a novel strategy for the development of anti-IS medicine by interfering with transferrin-thrombin/FXIIa interactions
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PubYear: 2020
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Unit code: 152453
Publication name: Circulation Research
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Paper source: https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.119.316453
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