University of Leicester
Browse

The transcriptional profile of iron deficiency in patients with heart failure: Heme‐sparing and reduced immune processes

Download (6.23 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-06, 11:55 authored by Niels Grote Beverborg, Ridha IS Alnuwaysir, George Markousis‐Mavrogenis, Martijn F Hoes, Haye H van der Wal, Simon PR Romaine, Mintu Nath, Andrea Koekoemoer, John GF Cleland, Chim C Lang, Stefan D Anker, Kenneth Dickstein, Marco Metra, Leong NgLeong Ng, Dirk J van Veldhuisen, Adriaan A Voors, Nilesh SamaniNilesh Samani, Peter van der Meer

Aims: Iron deficiency (ID) is highly prevalent in patients with heart failure (HF) and associated with morbidity and poor prognosis, but pathophysiological mechanisms are unknown. We aimed to identify novel biological pathways affected by ID. Methods and results: We studied 881 patients with HF from the BIOSTAT‐CHF cohort. ID was defined as a transferrin saturation <20%. Transcriptome profiling was performed in whole blood. Identified targets were validated in a human in vitro stem cell‐derived cardiomyocyte ID model utilizing deferoxamine as iron chelator. ID was identified in 554 (62.9%) patients, and 89 differentially expressed genes between ID and non‐ID were identified, of which 60 were up‐ and 29 were downregulated. Upregulated genes were overrepresented in pathways of erythrocyte development and homeostasis. Heme biosynthetic processes were confirmed as relatively upregulated in ID, while iron–sulfur cluster assembly was downregulated. Downregulated processes further included natural killer cell and lymphocyte mediated immunity. In agreement with patient data, cardiomyocyte iron depletion significantly induced the expression of two genes (SIAH2 and CLIC4), which could be normalized upon iron supplementation. Both SIAH2 and CLIC4 are associated with increased mortality in patients with HF (hazard ratio 2.40, 95% confidence interval 1.86–3.11, p < 0.001 hazard ratio 1.78, 95% confidence interval 1.53–2.07, p < 0.001, respectively).ConclusionIron deficiency is associated with the preservation of heme‐related processes at the cost of iron–sulfur clusters. Immune processes are downregulated, uncovering another high energy demand system affected. SIAH2 and CLIC4 might be modifiable factors in the relation between ID and impaired prognosis.

Funding

BIOSTAT-CHF was funded by a grant from the European Commission (FP7-242209-BIOSTAT-CHF; EudraCT 2010-020808-29).

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

European Journal of Heart Failure

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1388-9842

eissn

1879-0844

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-02-06

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leong Ng

Deposit date

2025-01-19

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC