Neurobiology of Disease (Oct 2006)

Characterization of α1-antitrypsin as a heme oxygenase-1 suppressor in Alzheimer plasma

  • Olivier C. Maes,
  • Steven Kravitz,
  • Yogesh Mawal,
  • Haixiang Su,
  • Adrienne Liberman,
  • Khalil Mehindate,
  • Dan Berlin,
  • Demetrios J. Sahlas,
  • Howard M. Chertkow,
  • Howard Bergman,
  • Calvin Melmed,
  • Hyman M. Schipper

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 89 – 100

Abstract

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Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) mRNA and protein levels are diminished in Alzheimer disease (AD) blood, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and choroid plexus. Herein, the presence of a heme oxygenase-1 suppressor (HOS) factor was ascertained by astroglial bioassay, biochemical techniques and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. We report significantly augmented plasma HOS activity in AD patients relative to healthy elderly and neurological controls. The HOS factor was determined to be a 50–100 kDa heat-labile, heparin-binding glycoprotein that is unrelated to antioxidant ingestion, plasma total antioxidant capacity, circulating cortisol levels or apolipoprotein E ε4 carrier status. HOS bioactivity was recapitulated by exogenous α1-antitrypsin. α1-antitrypsin levels were significantly increased in AD plasma and correlated with HOS activity and MMSE scores. α1-antitrypsin immunodepletion attenuated HOS activity of AD plasma. In AD brain, α1-antitrypsin immunoreactivity was augmented and co-distributed with HO-1. HOS activity of α1-antitrypsin may curtail HO-1-dependent derangement of cerebral iron homeostasis and account for diminished HO-1 expression in AD peripheral tissues.

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