4.6 Article

Expression patterns of iron regulatory proteins after intense light exposure in a cone-dominated retina

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 476, Issue 9, Pages 3483-3495

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11010-021-04175-5

Keywords

Retina; Light damage; Iron; Lipid peroxidation; Iron regulatory proteins

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Engineering Board, New Delhi [SERB/AS-027-2012]

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This study investigates the impact of light exposure on the expression of iron-handling proteins in the chick retina. Results showed that intense light exposure led to an increase in retinal Fe2+ levels and lipid peroxidation, as well as changes in the expression patterns of various iron-handling proteins. These alterations may contribute to oxidative stress and retinal cell damage, highlighting the complex interplay between light exposure and iron metabolism in ocular health.
Iron is implicated in ocular diseases such as in age-related macular degeneration. Light is also considered as a pathological factor in this disease. Earlier, two studies reported the influence of constant light environment on the pattern of expressions of iron-handling proteins. Here, we aimed to see the influence of light in 12-h light-12-h dark (12L:12D) cycles on the expression of iron-handling proteins in chick retina. Chicks were exposed to 400 lx (control) and 5000 lx (experimental) light at 12L:12D cycles and sacrificed at variable timepoints. Retinal ferrous ion (Fe2+) level, ultrastructural changes, lipid peroxidation level, immunolocalization and expression patterns of iron-handling proteins were analysed after light exposure. Both total Fe2+ level (p = 0.0004) and lipid peroxidation (p = 0.002) significantly increased at 12-, 48- and 168-h timepoint (for Fe2+) and 48- and 168-h timepoint (for lipid peroxidation), and there were degenerative retinal changes after 168 h of light exposure. Intense light exposure led to an increase in the levels of transferrin and transferrin receptor-1 (at 168-h) and ferroportin-1, whereas the levels of ferritins, hephaestin, (at 24-, 48- and 168-h timepoint) and ceruloplasmin (at 168-h timepoint) were decreased. These changes in iron-handling proteins after light exposure are likely due to a disturbance in the iron storage pool evident from decreased ferritin levels, which would result in increased intracellular Fe2+ levels. To counteract this, Fe2+ is released into the extracellular space, an observation supported by increased expression of ferroportin-1. Ceruloplasmin was able to convert Fe2+ into Fe3+ until 48 h of light exposure, but its decreased expression with time (at 168-h timepoint) resulted in increased extracellular Fe2+ that might have caused oxidative stress and retinal cell damage.

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