4.3 Article

Immunoreactive Hephaestin and ferroxidase activity are present in the cytosolic fraction of rat enterocytes

Journal

BIOMETALS
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 687-695

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10534-012-9527-9

Keywords

Intestine; Iron; Copper; Absorption

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (US) [R01 DK074867]

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Discovered over a decade ago, hephaestin (Heph) has been implicated as a ferroxidase (FOX) vital for intestinal iron absorption. Stringent structural or kinetic data derived from purified, native protein is however lacking, leading to the hypothesis that an alternate, undiscovered form of Heph could exist in mammalian enterocytes. This possibility was tested using laboratory rodent and cell culture models. Cytosolic and membrane fractions were obtained from rat enterocytes and purity of the fractions was assessed. Western blot analyses revealed Heph in cytosol obtained by three different methods, ruling out the possibility of a method-induced artifact being the major contributor to this observation. Absence of two different membrane-proteins, ferroportin 1 and Menke's copper ATPase in cytosol, and the absence of lipids in representative cytosolic samples tested by thin layer chromatography, eliminated significant membrane contamination of cytosol. Further, immunohisto- and immunocyto-chemical analyses identified Heph in rat enterocytes and in two intestinal epithelial cell lines, IEC-6 and Caco-2, intracellularly. Additionally, cytosolic Heph increased upon iron-deprivation but more important, decreased significantly upon copper-deprivation, mimicking the response of membrane-bound Heph. Moreover, FOX activity was present in rat cytosol, and was partly inhibited by anti-Heph antibody. Finally, lack of immunodetectable ceruloplasmin (Cp) by western blot precluded Cp as an underlying cause of this activity. These data demonstrate that rat enterocytes contain a soluble/cytosolic form of Heph possibly contributing to the observed FOX activity.

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