Transferrin

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Revision as of 15:26, 9 April 2024 by Nikolas (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<section begin="clinical biochemistry" />'''Transferrin''' is a serum protein whose function is to transport iron in the blood; more specifically, each molecule of transferrin binds two Fe<sup>3+</sup> ions with high affinity. Transferrin binds to transferrin receptors on cells which require iron, after which the transferrin-transferrin receptor complex is endocytosed. The pure protein, non-iron-bound form of transferrin is called '''apoferritin'''. Transferrin is a...")
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Transferrin is a serum protein whose function is to transport iron in the blood; more specifically, each molecule of transferrin binds two Fe3+ ions with high affinity. Transferrin binds to transferrin receptors on cells which require iron, after which the transferrin-transferrin receptor complex is endocytosed. The pure protein, non-iron-bound form of transferrin is called apoferritin. Transferrin is a negative acute phase protein.

The liver up-regulates the synthesis of transferrin in case of long-term iron deficiency.

Transferrin in laboratory medicine

Transferrin is measured clinically as a surrogate for the body's iron stores. It's not necessary to measure routinely in the evaluation of iron status, as a decreased ferritin level is sufficient for the diagnosis. There is some diurnal variation, so it should be measured in the morning.

As a negative acute phase protein, it'll be falsely low in case of infection or inflammation. Elevated levels of transferrin indicates long-term iron deficiency.

Transferrin saturation and TIBC

Transferrin can also be used to calculate transferrin saturation and total iron binding capacity (TIBC). Transferrin saturation measures how much of the serum transferrin is saturated with iron. TIBC measures how much iron the transferrin in the serum could bind at max. However, normally, practically 100% of serum transferrin is saturated with iron. Because each molecule of transferrin can bind two Fe3+ molecules, TIBC is calculated as 2 x serum transferrin level. Then, the transferrin saturation can be calculated as serum iron divided by TIBC.

Transferrin saturation and TIBC is not necessary to diagnose iron deficiency; ferritin alone is sufficient for that. A decreased transferrin saturation indicates iron deficiency and is less affected by acute phase than ferritin.

Both transferrin saturation and TIBC can be used in the evaluation and follow-up of haemochromatosis.