Expression patterns of iron regulatory proteins after intense light exposure in a cone-dominated retina.
Meenakshi MauryaTapas Chandra NagPankaj KumarTara Sankar RoyPublished in: Molecular and cellular biochemistry (2021)
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.