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Accepted Preprint first posted online on 24 June 2009

Journal of Endocrinology 2009;202:389.

Journal of Endocrinology (2009) In press
DOI: 10.1677/JOE-09-0191
© 2009 Society for Endocrinology
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RESEARCH

Identification, sequencing, and cellular localization of hepcidin in guinea pig (Cavia porcellus)

Peggy Schwarz, Pavel Strnad, Nadine Singer, Franz Oswald, Robert Ehehalt, Guido Adler and Hasan Kulaksiz

P Schwarz, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany
P Strnad, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany
N Singer, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany
F Oswald, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany
R Ehehalt, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
G Adler, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany
H Kulaksiz, University Hospital Ulm, Ulm, 89081, Germany

Correspondence: Hasan Kulaksiz, Email: hasan.kulaksiz{at}uniklinik-ulm.de

Hepcidin, a cysteine-rich peptide hormone with antimicrobial and iron regulatory activity plays a central role in regulating iron metabolism during inflammation, hypoxia, iron deficiency and iron overload. The aim of this study was to isolate and sequence the guinea pig hepcidin gene and show peptide's tissue distribution to identify the guinea pig as good animal model to study the regulation and function of hepcidin. The guinea pig hepcidin cDNA contains a 252 bp open reading frame encoding for an 83 amino acid protein with highly conserved 8 cysteine residues. Phylogenetic analyzes showed that guinea pig hepcidin was more related to human and chimpanzee than to rodents like mouse or rat. RT-PCR studies revealed that hepcidin mRNA was most abundant in liver, less ample in pancreas, heart and kidney and not detectable in lung and biliary system. Western blot analyses showed a distinct immunoreactive band of approximately 8 kDa, consistent with the predicted size of prohepcidin, and revealed that guinea pig hepcidin protein is synthesized predominantly in the liver, and with lower expression in kidney, heart, and pancreas. Immunohistochemical studies showed hepcidin predominantly at the basolateral membrane domain of hepatocytes in periportal regions. In pancreas, hepcidin immunoreactivity was confined to endocrine islets of Langerhans, while hepcidin was seen in tubules, but not in the glomeruli in the kidney. Our data identify guinea pig as a convenient model organism to study the role of hepcidin, given the remarkable sequence similarity and tissue distribution pattern largely identical to human.







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