Cell Metabolism
Volume 16, Issue 5, 7 November 2012, Pages 645-657
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Article
mTOR Regulates Cellular Iron Homeostasis through Tristetraprolin

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Summary

Iron is an essential cofactor with unique redox properties. Iron-regulatory proteins 1 and 2 (IRP1/2) have been established as important regulators of cellular iron homeostasis, but little is known about the role of other pathways in this process. Here we report that the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) regulates iron homeostasis by modulating transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) stability and altering cellular iron flux. Mechanistic studies identify tristetraprolin (TTP), a protein involved in anti-inflammatory response, as the downstream target of mTOR that binds to and enhances degradation of TfR1 mRNA. We also show that TTP is strongly induced by iron chelation, promotes downregulation of iron-requiring genes in both mammalian and yeast cells, and modulates survival in low-iron states. Taken together, our data uncover a link between metabolic, inflammatory, and iron-regulatory pathways, and point toward the existence of a yeast-like TTP-mediated iron conservation program in mammals.

Highlights

▸ mTOR regulates iron homeostasis by altering expression of iron transporters ▸ TTP regulates iron homeostasis, similar to yeast Cth1p/2p ▸ mTOR regulates TfR1 and iron homeostasis through TTP ▸ TfR1 mRNA is a target of TTP

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