Iron chelation rescues hemolytic anemia and skin photosensitivity in congenital erythropoietic porphyria

Author:

Blouin Jean-Marc12ORCID,Ged Cécile123,Lalanne Magalie12,Lamrissi-Garcia Isabelle12,Morice-Picard Fanny3,Costet Pierre4,Daher Raêd25,Moreau-Gaudry François12,Bedel Aurélie12,Puy Hervé256,Gouya Laurent256,Karim Zoubida25ORCID,Richard Emmanuel12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University Bordeaux, INSERM, Biotherapy of Genetic Diseases, Inflammation and Cancer (BMGIC), U1035, CHU Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France;

2. Laboratory of Excellence Gr-Ex, Paris, France;

3. Centre de Référence des Maladies Rares de la Peau, Hôpital Pédiatrique, CHU Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France;

4. Animalerie Spécialisée, Université de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France;

5. Université de Paris, Centre de Recherche sur l’Inflammation, INSERM U1149, Paris, France; and

6. Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Centre Français des Porphyries, Hôpital Louis Mourier, Colombes, France

Abstract

AbstractCongenital erythropoietic porphyria (CEP) is an inborn error of heme synthesis resulting from uroporphyrinogen III synthase (UROS) deficiency and the accumulation of nonphysiological porphyrin isomer I metabolites. Clinical features are heterogeneous among patients with CEP but usually combine skin photosensitivity and chronic hemolytic anemia, the severity of which is related to porphyrin overload. Therapeutic options include symptomatic strategies only and are unsatisfactory. One promising approach to treating CEP is to reduce the erythroid production of porphyrins through substrate reduction therapy by inhibiting 5-aminolevulinate synthase 2 (ALAS2), the first and rate-limiting enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway. We efficiently reduced porphyrin accumulation after RNA interference–mediated downregulation of ALAS2 in human erythroid cellular models of CEP disease. Taking advantage of the physiological iron-dependent posttranscriptional regulation of ALAS2, we evaluated whether iron chelation with deferiprone could decrease ALAS2 expression and subsequent porphyrin production in vitro and in vivo in a CEP murine model. Treatment with deferiprone of UROS-deficient erythroid cell lines and peripheral blood CD34+-derived erythroid cultures from a patient with CEP inhibited iron-dependent protein ALAS2 and iron-responsive element–binding protein 2 expression and reduced porphyrin production. Furthermore, porphyrin accumulation progressively decreased in red blood cells and urine, and skin photosensitivity in CEP mice treated with deferiprone (1 or 3 mg/mL in drinking water) for 26 weeks was reversed. Hemolysis and iron overload improved upon iron chelation with full correction of anemia in CEP mice treated at the highest dose of deferiprone. Our findings highlight, in both mouse and human models, the therapeutic potential of iron restriction to modulate the phenotype in CEP.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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