Abstract

Research Article

Detection of Transferrin Oxidative Modification In vitro and In vivo by Mass Spectrometry. Hereditary Hemochromatosis is a Model

Mohamed Ahmed*

Published: 27 May, 2025 | Volume 9 - Issue 1 | Pages: 009-019

Hereditary Hemochromatosis (HH) is an inherited recessive autosomal disorder characterized by the accumulation of excess iron. When iron-binding proteins become saturated, concentrations of free or Non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) rise, a condition thought to be responsible for the adverse effects associated with HH. To investigate whether disturbing iron homeostasis plays a role in free radical injury in HH, protein carbonyls were found to be 1-7 times higher in patients with HH than in controls, with the greatest increases observed in untreated HH patients with high ferritin and > 90% transferrin saturation with iron. An unpaired t-test revealed a p value of 0.0278 (p < 0.05), which is considered statistically significant.
In vitro oxidation of transferrin standards with hydrogen peroxide and excess iron, followed by immobilized trypsin digestion (Poroszyme), high-resolution LC-MS/MS analysis (Q-TOF Ultima, Waters), and MS/MS data processing (PEAKS, Bioinformatics Solution), identified several tryptic peptides containing oxidized Methionine (Met), Tryptophan (Trp), and Histidine (His) residues. Using the same methodology, oxidized residues were subsequently detected in transferrin isolated from plasma samples of patients severely affected by HH. Comparison of MS/MS spectra of in vitro oxidized samples with the most fragment ion peaks in common with oxidized peptide MS/MS spectra from patient samples revealed a strong correlation between the two. These data show that elevated NTBI may be involved in the oxidative modification of transferrin and that such modifications may play a significant role in the pathophysiology of HH.

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Keywords:

Transferrin; Oxidative modifications; Mass spectrometry; Hereditary hemochromatosis

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