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Letter


Nature Medicine 13, 1096 - 1101 (2007)
Published online: 26 August 2007 | doi:10.1038/nm1629

High levels of GDF15 in thalassemia suppress expression of the iron regulatory protein hepcidin

Toshihiko Tanno1, Natarajan V Bhanu1, Patricia A Oneal1, Sung-Ho Goh1, Pamela Staker1, Y Terry Lee1, John W Moroney2, Christopher H Reed2, Naomi LC Luban3, Rui-Hong Wang4, Thomas E Eling5, Richard Childs6, Tomas Ganz7, Susan F Leitman8, Suthat Fucharoen9 & Jeffery L Miller1


In thalassemia, deficient globin-chain production during erythropoiesis results in anemia1, 2, 3. Thalassemia may be further complicated by iron overload (frequently exacerbated by blood transfusion), which induces numerous endocrine diseases, hepatic cirrhosis, cardiac failure and even death4. Accumulation of iron in the absence of blood transfusions may result from inappropriate suppression of the iron-regulating peptide hepcidin by an erythropoietic mechanism5. To test this hypothesis, we examined erythroblast transcriptome profiles from 15 healthy, nonthalassemic donors. Growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15), a member of the transforming growth factor-beta superfamily, showed increased expression and secretion during erythroblast maturation. Healthy volunteers had mean GDF15 serum concentrations of 450 plusminus 50 pg/ml. In comparison, individuals with beta-thalassemia syndromes had elevated GDF15 serum levels (mean 66,000 plusminus 9,600 pg/ml; range 4,800–248,000 pg/ml; P < 0.05) that were positively correlated with the levels of soluble transferrin receptor, erythropoietin and ferritin. Serum from thalassemia patients suppressed hepcidin mRNA expression in primary human hepatocytes, and depletion of GDF15 reversed hepcidin suppression. These results suggest that GDF15 overexpression arising from an expanded erythroid compartment contributes to iron overload in thalassemia syndromes by inhibiting hepcidin expression.


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