A vicious cycle of bisretinoid formation and oxidation relevant to recessive Stargardt disease

J Biol Chem. 2021 Jan 5:jbc.RA120.015890. doi: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.015890. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The ability of iron to transfer electrons enables the contribution of this metal to a variety of cellular activities even as the redox properties of iron are also responsible for the generation of hydroxyl radicals (•OH), the most destructive of the reactive oxygen species. We previously showed that iron can promote the oxidation of bisretinoid by generating highly reactive hydroxyl radical (•OH). Now we report that preservation of iron regulation in the retina is not sufficient to prevent iron-induced bisretinoid oxidative degradation when blood iron levels are elevated in liver-specific hepcidin knock-out mice. We obtained evidence for the perpetuation of Fenton reactions in the presence of the bisretinoid A2E and visible light. On the other hand, iron chelation by deferiprone was not associated with changes in post-bleaching recovery of 11-cis-retinal or dark-adapted ERG b-wave amplitudes indicating that the activity of Rpe65, a rate-determining visual cycle protein that carries an iron-binding domain is not affected. Notably, iron levels were elevated in the neural retina and RPE of Abca4-/- mice. Consistent with higher iron content, ferritin-L immunostaining was elevated in RPE of a patient diagnosed with ABCA4-associated disease and in RPE and photoreceptor cells of Abca4-/- mice. In neural retina of the mutant mice, reduced Tfrc mRNA was also an indicator of retinal iron overload. Thus iron chelation may defend retina when bisretinoid toxicity is implicated in disease processes.

Keywords: Fenton reaction; bisretinoid; ferritin; high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); iron; light; lipofuscin; retina; retinal degeneration; retinal pigment epithelium.