Journal article
Ceruloplasmin gene-deficient mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis show attenuated early disease evolution
MM Gresle, K Schulz, A Jonas, VM Perreau, T Cipriani, AG Baxter, S Miranda-Hernandez, J Field, VG Jokubaitis, R Cherny, I Volitakis, S David, TJ Kilpatrick, H Butzkueven
Journal of Neuroscience Research | WILEY | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.23349
Abstract
We conducted a microarray study to identify genes that are differentially regulated in the spinal cords of mice with the inflammatory disease experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) relative to healthy mice. In total 181 genes with at least a two-fold increase in expression were identified, and most of these genes were associated with immune function. Unexpectedly, ceruloplasmin (Cp), a ferroxidase that converts toxic ferrous iron to its nontoxic ferric form and also promotes the efflux of iron from astrocytes in the CNS, was shown to be highly upregulated (13.2-fold increase) in EAE spinal cord. Expression of Cp protein is known to be increased in several neurological conditions, bu..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Contract grant sponsor: National Health and Medical Research Council Australia, contract grant number: 628856 (to H. B.); Contract grant sponsor: Centre for Research Excellence Fellowship 1001216 (to M.M.G.).