International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2021)

Matriptase-2 and Hemojuvelin in Hepcidin Regulation: In Vivo Immunoblot Studies in <i>Mask</i> Mice

  • Jan Krijt,
  • Jana Frýdlová,
  • Iuliia Gurieva,
  • Petr Přikryl,
  • Martin Báječný,
  • Andrea U. Steinbicker,
  • Martin Vokurka,
  • Jaroslav Truksa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22052650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 5
p. 2650

Abstract

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Matriptase-2, a serine protease expressed in hepatocytes, is a negative regulator of hepcidin expression. The purpose of the study was to investigate the interaction of matriptase-2 with hemojuvelin protein in vivo. Mice lacking the matriptase-2 proteolytic activity (mask mice) display decreased content of hemojuvelin protein. Vice versa, the absence of hemojuvelin results in decreased liver content of matriptase-2, indicating that the two proteins interact. To further characterize the role of matriptase-2, we investigated iron metabolism in mask mice fed experimental diets. Administration of iron-enriched diet increased liver iron stores as well as hepcidin expression. Treatment of iron-overloaded mask mice with erythropoietin increased hemoglobin and hematocrit, indicating that the response to erythropoietin is intact in mask mice. Feeding of an iron-deficient diet to mask mice significantly increased spleen weight as well as the splenic content of erythroferrone and transferrin receptor proteins, indicating stress erythropoiesis. Liver hepcidin expression was decreased; expression of Id1 was not changed. Overall, the results suggest a complex interaction between matriptase-2 and hemojuvelin, and demonstrate that hepcidin can to some extent be regulated even in the absence of matriptase-2 proteolytic activity.

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