Literature DB >> 19740759

Peroxidase activity of hemoglobin-haptoglobin complexes: covalent aggregation and oxidative stress in plasma and macrophages.

Alexandr Kapralov1, Irina I Vlasova, Weihong Feng, Akihiro Maeda, Karen Walson, Vladimir A Tyurin, Zhentai Huang, Rajesh K Aneja, Joseph Carcillo, Hülya Bayir, Valerian E Kagan.   

Abstract

As a hemoprotein, hemoglobin (Hb) can, in the presence of H(2)O(2), act as a peroxidase. In red blood cells, this activity is regulated by the reducing environment. For stroma-free Hb this regulation is lost, and the potential for Hb to become a peroxidase is high and further increased by inflammatory cells generating superoxide. The latter can be converted into H(2)O(2) and feed Hb peroxidase activity. Haptoglobins (Hp) bind with extracellular Hb and reportedly weaken Hb peroxidase activity. Here we demonstrate that: (i) Hb peroxidase activity is retained upon binding with Hp; (ii) in the presence of H(2)O(2), Hb-Hp peroxidase complexes undergo covalent cross-linking; (iii) peroxidase activity of Hb-Hp complexes and aggregates consumes reductants such as ascorbate and nitric oxide; (iv) cross-linked Hb-Hp aggregates are taken up by macrophages at rates exceeding those for noncovalently cross-linked Hb-Hp complexes; (v) the engulfed Hb-Hp aggregates activate superoxide production and induce intracellular oxidative stress (deplete endogenous glutathione and stimulate lipid peroxidation); (vi) Hb-Hp aggregates cause cytotoxicity to macrophages; and (vii) Hb-Hp aggregates are present in septic plasma. Overall, our data suggest that under conditions of severe inflammation and oxidative stress, peroxidase activity of Hb-Hp covalent aggregates may cause macrophage dysfunction and microvascular vasoconstriction, which are commonly seen in severe sepsis and hemolytic diseases.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19740759      PMCID: PMC2781594          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.045567

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  64 in total

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10.  Haptoglobin increases the vulnerability of CD163-expressing neurons to hemoglobin.

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