The Asian Age

‘ Why iron worsens malaria infection found’

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Washington, March 30: Scientists have found a possible explanatio­n for why iron can sometimes worsen malaria infection, an advance that may lead to better treatments for the disease.

By studying mice and samples from malaria patients, researcher­s found that extra iron interferes with ferroporti­n, a protein that prevents a toxic buildup of iron in red blood cells and helps protect these cells against malaria infection.

The researcher­s at the National Institutes of Health ( NIH) in the US also found that a mutant form of ferroporti­n that occurs in African population­s appears to protect against malaria.

The findings, published in the journal Science, may help researcher­s and healthcare officials develop strategies to prevent and treat malaria infections, which numbered nearly 216 million worldwide in 2016.

“Our study helps solve a long- standing mystery,” said Tracey Rouault, a senior investigat­or at NIH.

“Iron supplement­s can sometimes worsen malaria infection and, conversely, iron deficiency can be protective in some cases,” said Rouault.

“Our findings reveal that ferroporti­n — its function, as well as its regulation by iron levels — helps to explain these observatio­ns,” Rouault said.

The study team found that red blood cells use ferroporti­n to remove excess iron, which malaria parasites consume as a food source.

In studies of mice, the team found that the absence of ferroporti­n in erythroid cells ( red blood cells and their precursors) caused iron to accumulate to toxic levels inside red blood cells.

This, in turn, stressed the cells and shortened their life span, researcher­s said.

The team also found that mice lacking ferroporti­n had more parasites and worse outcomes when infected with malaria, compared to infected mice with intact ferroporti­n.

When they fed mice a high- iron diet, the researcher­s also found that a hormone called hepcidin regulates ferroporti­n in erythroid cells.

The hormone, which is more abundant in highiron environmen­ts, lowered ferroporti­n levels on erythrobla­sts ( precursors to red blood cells) and, subsequent­ly, in red blood cells.

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