Lack of Transferrin Receptor 1 in the Heart Causes Lethal Cardiomyopathy and Disruption of Mitophagy in Mice
http://dukespace.lib...dle/10161/10522
"Mice lacking Tfr1 in the heart died in the second week of life, with cardiomegaly, poor cardiac function, failure of mitochondrial respiration and ineffective mitophagy. The phenotype could only be rescued by aggressive and ongoing iron therapy, but it was ameliorated by either a mutant Tfr1 allele that does not bind transferrin or administration of nicotinamide riboside, an NAD precursor."
Lack of Transferrin Receptor 1 in the Heart Causes Lethal Cardiomyopathy and Disruption of Mitophagy in Mice
Hadn't seen that one, thanks. Here is another one to slip thru the cracks.
Lethal Cardiomyopathy in Mice Lacking Transferrin Receptor in the Heart
http://www.cell.com/...1247(15)01034-7
Access is limited until 2016-02-13T00:00:00Z
It appears NAD boosting has other far reaching benefits. Anything that helps keep hearts heathy is a positive indicator for me!
In BriefCoexisting iron deficiency worsens the prognosis for patients with heart failure. Xu et al. show that the transferrin receptor is essential in the mouse heart, iron is needed continuously to support oxidative phosphorylation, mitophagy is ineffective when iron is insufficient, and nicotinamide riboside benefits mice with cardiac iron deficiency.
Summary"Both iron overload and iron deficiency have been associated with cardiomyopathy and heart failure, but cardiac iron utilization is incompletely understood. We hypothesized that the transferrin receptor (Tfr1) might play a role in cardiac iron uptake and used gene targeting to examine the role of Tfr1 in vivo. Surprisingly, we found that decreased iron, due to inactivation of Tfr1, was associated with severe cardiac consequences. Mice lacking Tfr1 in the heart died in the second week of life and had cardiomegaly, poor cardiac function, failure of mitochondrial respiration, and ineffective mitophagy. The phenotype could only be rescued by aggressive iron therapy, but it was ameliorated by administration of nicotinamide riboside, an NAD precursor. Our findings underscore the importance of both Tfr1 and iron in the heart, and may inform therapy for patients with heart failure." http://www.cell.com/...(15)01034-7.pdfPlease cite this article in press as: Xu et al., Lethal Cardiomyopathy in Mice Lacking Transferrin Receptor in the Heart, Cell Reports (2015), http:// dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.09.023
Bryan, the NR doesn't seem to be doing your memory any favours....