Serum ferritin is an important inflammatory disease marker, as it is mainly a leakage product from damaged cells
University of Manchester · Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Biotechnology · +2 more institutions
Abstract
"Serum ferritin" presents a paradox, as the iron storage protein ferritin is not synthesised in serum yet is to be found there. Serum ferritin is also a well known inflammatory marker, but it is unclear whether serum ferritin reflects or causes inflammation, or whether it is involved in an inflammatory cycle. We argue here that serum ferritin arises from damaged cells, and is thus a marker of cellular damage. The protein in serum ferritin is considered benign, but it has lost (i.e. dumped) most of its normal complement of iron which when unliganded is highly toxic. The facts that serum ferritin levels can correlate with both disease and with body iron stores are thus expected on simple chemical kinetic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 466
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Ferritin
- Oxidative stress
- Inflammation
- Serum ferritin
- Chemistry
- Immunology
- Medicine
- Biology