Abstract
We have used succinylacetone (4,6-dioxoheptanoic acid), a specific inhibitor of delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase, to gain insight into the defect in iron metabolism in the Belgrade anemia. The Belgrade rat has an inherited microcytic, hypochromic anemia associated with poor iron uptake into developing erythroid cells. Succinylacetone inhibits heme synthesis, leading to nonheme iron accumulation in mitochondria and cytosol of normal reticulocytes. When succinylacetone is used to inhibit Belgrade heme synthesis, iron from diferric transferrin does not accumulate in the stromal fraction that contains mitochondria, nor does 59Fe accumulate in the nonheme cytosolic fraction. Hence, the defect in the Belgrade rat reticulocyte occurs in the endocytic vesicle or in a step subsequent to iron transit from the vesicle but before the nonheme cytosolic or mitochondrial iron fractions. Therefore, the mutation affects either the release of iron from transferrin or iron transport from the vesicle to the mitochondrion.