Ceruloplasmin deficiency does not induce macrophagic iron overload: lessons from a new rat model of hereditary aceruloplasminemia

Male 0301 basic medicine 570 Iron Overload [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] Iron 610 metals Sequence Homology Rats, Sprague-Dawley 03 medical and health sciences genetic disease hepatocyte Animals CRISPR/Cas9 Base Sequence Macrophages Ceruloplasmin Neurodegenerative Diseases Iron Metabolism Disorders Rats [SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] Disease Models, Animal Liver Mutation Female hepcidin CRISPR-Cas Systems Spleen
DOI: 10.1096/fj.201901106r Publication Date: 2019-09-28T01:33:40Z
ABSTRACT
Hereditary aceruloplasminemia (HA), related to mutations in the ceruloplasmin (Cp) gene, leads to iron accumulation. Ceruloplasmin ferroxidase activity being considered essential for macrophage iron release, macrophage iron overload is expected, but it is not found in hepatic and splenic macrophages in humans. Our objective was to get a better understanding of the mechanisms leading to iron excess in HA. A clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR associated protein 9 (Cas9) knockout of the Cp gene was performed on Sprague‐Dawley rats. We evaluated the iron status in plasma, the expression of iron metabolism genes, and the status of other metals whose interactions with iron are increasingly recognized. In Cp–/– rats, plasma ceruloplasmin and ferroxidase activity were absent, together with decreased iron concentration and transferrin saturation. Similarly as in humans, the hepatocytes were iron overloaded conversely to hepatic and splenic macrophages. Despite a relative hepcidin deficiency in Cp–/– rats and the loss of ferroxidase activity, potentially expected to limit the interaction of iron with transferrin, no increase of plasma non‐transferrin‐bound iron level was found. Copper was decreased in the spleen, whereas manganese was increased in the plasma. These data suggest that the reported role of ceruloplasmin cannot fully explain the iron hepatosplenic phenotype in HA, encouraging the search for additional mechanisms.—Kenawi, M., Rouger, E., Island, M.‐L., Leroyer, P., Robin, F., Remy, S., Tesson, L., Anegon, I., Nay, K., Derbré, F., Brissot, P., Ropert, M., Cavey, T., Loréal, O. Ceruloplasmin deficiency does not induce macrophagic iron overload: lessons from a new rat model of hereditary aceruloplasminemia. FASEB J. 33, 13492–13502 (2019). www.fasebj.org
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