Publication | Open Access
A Japanese Family with Ferroportin Disease Caused by a Novel Mutation of SLC40A1 Gene: Hyperferritinemia Associated with a Relatively Low Transferrin Saturation of Iron
41
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
Iron MetabolismGeneticsImmunologyPathologyLow Transferrin SaturationRedox BiologyOxidative StressSlc40a1 GeneLow Transferrin SaturationsJapanese FamilyHematologyFerroportin DiseaseHealth SciencesLiver PhysiologyHeme TransportHeme HomeostasisHepatologyHeme DegradationPathogenesisMedicineHepcidin
Ferroportin disease, autosomal-dominant reticuloendothelial iron overload, may be more prevalent than hemochromatosis in Japan. Hyperferritinemia of 822 ng/ml with 24.8% transferrin saturation of iron was incidentally noted in a 43-year-old man. His iron overload was selective in Kupffer cells of the liver. Subsequently, his father was found to have asymptomatic hyperferritinemia of 2,283 ng/ml with 62.1% saturation. These affected subjects were heterozygous for 1467A>C (R489S) in SLC40A1, and without other mutations of the hemochromatosis genes. Here, we report a Japanese family with ferroportin disease, characterized by hyperferritinemia with relatively low transferrin saturations of iron.
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