Differentiating iron-loading anemias using a newly developed and analytically validated ELISA for human serum erythroferrone

5Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Erythroferrone (ERFE), the erythroid regulator of iron metabolism, inhibits hepcidin to increase iron availability for erythropoiesis. ERFE plays a pathological role during ineffective erythropoiesis as occurs in X-linked sideroblastic anemia (XLSA) and β-thalassemia. Its measurement might serve as an indicator of severity for these diseases. However, for reliable quantification of ERFE analytical characterization is indispensable to determine the assay's limitations and define proper methodology. We developed a sandwich ELISA for human serum ERFE using polyclonal antibodies and report its extensive analytical validation. This new assay showed, for the first time, the differentiation of XLSA and β-thalassemia major patients from healthy controls (p = 0.03) and from each other (p<0.01), showing the assay provides biological plausible results. Despite poor dilution linearity, parallelism and recovery in patient serum matrix, which indicated presence of a matrix effect and/or different immunoreactivity of the antibodies to the recombinant standard and the endogenous analyte, our assay correlated well with two other existing ERFE ELISAs (both R2 = 0.83). Nevertheless, employment of one optimal dilution of all serum samples is warranted to obtain reliable results. When adequately performed, the assay can be used to further unravel the human erythropoiesis-hepcidin-iron axis in various disorders and assess the added diagnostic value of ERFE.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Diepeveen, L., Roelofs, R., Grebenchtchikov, N., van Swelm, R., Kautz, L., & Swinkels, D. (2021). Differentiating iron-loading anemias using a newly developed and analytically validated ELISA for human serum erythroferrone. PLoS ONE, 16(7 July). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254851

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free