Authors
Dominic Hare, Scott Ayton, Ashley Bush, Peng Lei
Publication date
2013/7/18
Source
Frontiers in aging neuroscience
Volume
5
Pages
34
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Description
Iron is the most abundant transition metal within the brain, and is vital for a number of cellular processes including neurotransmitter synthesis, myelination of neurons, and mitochondrial function. Redox cycling between ferrous and ferric iron is utilized in biology for various electron transfer reactions essential to life, yet this same chemistry mediates deleterious reactions with oxygen that induce oxidative stress. Consequently, there is a precise and tightly controlled mechanism to regulate iron in the brain. When iron is dysregulated, both conditions of iron overload and iron deficiencies are harmful to the brain. This review focuses on how iron metabolism is maintained in the brain, and how an alteration to iron and iron metabolism adversely affects neurological function.
Total citations
20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202433329324844394540443828
Scholar articles
D Hare, S Ayton, A Bush, P Lei - Frontiers in aging neuroscience, 2013