| Literature DB >> 21966212 |
Jennifer A Dickens1, David A Lomas.
Abstract
Alpha-1-antitrypsin is the most abundant circulating protease inhibitor. It is mainly produced by the liver and secreted into the circulation where it acts to prevent excessive proteolytic damage in the lungs by the enzyme neutrophil elastase. The most common severe deficiency allele is the Z mutation, which causes the protein to self-associate into ordered polymers. These polymers accumulate within hepatocytes to cause liver damage. The resulting lack of circulating α(1)-antitrypsin predisposes the Z homozygote to proteolytic lung damage and emphysema. Other pathways may also contribute to the development of lung disease. In particular, polymers of Z α(1)-antitrypsin can form within the lung where they act as a pro-inflammatory stimulus that may exacerbate protease-mediated lung damage. Researchers recognized in the 1980s that plasma α(1)-antitrypsin levels could be restored by intravenous infusions of purified human protein. Alpha-1-antitrypsin replacement therapy was introduced in 1987 but subsequent clinical trials have produced conflicting results, and to date there remains no widely accepted clinical evidence of the efficacy of α(1)-antitrypsin replacement therapy. This review addresses our current understanding of disease pathogenesis in α(1)-antitrypsin deficiency and questions why this treatment in isolation may not be effective. In particular it discusses the possible role of α(1)-antitrypsin polymers in exacerbating intrapulmonary inflammation and attenuating the efficacy of α(1)-antitrypsin replacement therapy.Entities:
Keywords: augmentation therapy; emphysema; α1-antitrypsin deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21966212 PMCID: PMC3180514 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S14018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Pathogenic alleles that cause α1-antitrypsin deficiency
| Variant | Mutation | Molecular basis of disease | Clinical features | Epidemiology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I98 | Arg39Cys | Protein misfolding; able to form heteropolymers. | No clear disease association | Disease only reported in compound heterozygotes |
| King’s | Hisp334Asp | Rapid polymerization in hepatocyte endoplasmic reticulum, delayed secretion | Neonatal jaundice. | Case report |
| Mheerlen | Pro369Leu | Retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, none secreted | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes. | Case report |
| Mmalton | Δ52Phe (M2 variant) | Intracellular degradation and polymerization; low serum concentration | Well established association with liver disease and emphysema in homozygotes | Most common rare deficiency allele in Sardinia; |
| Mmineral springs | Gly67Glu | Abnormal post-translational biosynthesis but no polymerization; low serum concentration | Emphysema in homozygotes | Unusual as described in a Afro-Caribbean individual in the United States |
| Mnichinan | Δ52Phe and Gly148 Arg | Intracellular polymerization in hepatocytes and plasma deficiency | Risk of liver disease and emphysema | Case report (Japanese family with consanguineous origin) |
| Mpalermo | Δ51Phe | Serum deficiency | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes | Case report |
| Mprocida | Leu41Pro | Unstable protein structure leading to intracellular degradation; reduced catalytic activity of circulating protein | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes | Case report |
| Mvall d’hebron | Pro369Ser | Retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, none secreted | Presumed risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes; 50% normal serum α1-antitrypsin level in M/vall d’hebron (/wurzburg) heterozygotes | Case reports from Spain and Germany |
| Mvarallo | Δ41–51, replaced with 22 bp sequence creating stop codon at 70–71 | Unknown intracellular defect | Presumed risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes; 50% normal serum α1-antitrypsin level in M/Mvarallo heterozygote | Case report |
| Pittsburgh | Met358 Arg | Function altered to an antithrombin | Fatal bleeding disorder | Case report |
| Plowell (=QO Cardiff) and Pduarte | Asp256Val (M1 and M4 alleles respectively) | Intracellular degradation and plasma deficiency | Increased risk of emphysema in Z/QO compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| S | Glu264Val | Protein misfolding and reduced secretion; able to form heteropolymers with Z α1-antitrypsin | Emphysema seen in SZ heterozygotes but less severe than in ZZ. | Most common deficiency variant. Carrier frequency: |
| Siiyama | Ser53Phe | Intracellular degradation and polymerization; low serum concentration | Liver disease and emphysema in homozygotes | Rare, but most common deficiency allele in Japan |
| Wbethesda | Ala336Thr | Intracellular degradation, serum levels 50% normal | Risk of liver disease and emphysema in compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| Ybarcelona | Asp256Val and Pro391His | Unknown intracellular defect; very low serum protein | Severe emphysema reported in homozygote | Case report |
| Z | Glu342 Lys | Intracellular degradation and polymerization; low serum concentration | Homozygotes: well established association with liver disease and emphysema. MZ heterozygotes may be more susceptible to airflow obstruction | Commonest severe deficiency variant. Carrier frequency: |
| Zausburg (=Ztun) | Glu342 Lys (M2 variant) | Intracellular degradation and polymerization; low serum concentration | Liver disease and emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| Zwrexham | Ser−19 Leu and Glu342 Lys (Z mutation) | Poor expression, low serum concentration | Emphysema reported in compound Z/Zwrexham compound heterozygotes. | Case report |
| QO Bellingham | Lys217 stop codon | No detectable α1-antitrypsin mRNA | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Bolton | Δ1bpPro362 causing stop codon at 373 | Truncated protein; intracellular degradation and no secreted protein | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Cairo | Lys259 stop codon | Unknown intracellular defect | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Clayton | Pro362 insC causing stop codon at 376 | Truncated protein; intracellular degradation and no secreted protein | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Devon (=QO Newport) | Gly115Ser and Glu342 Lys (Z mutation) | Intracellular degradation and polymerization; reduced serum concentration | Risk of emphysema and liver disease in compound heterozygotes. | Case report |
| QO Granite Falls | Δ1bpTyr160 causing stop codon | No detectable α1-antitrypsin mRNA | Severe emphysema reported in Z compound heterozygote | Case report |
| QO Hong Kong | Δ2bpLeu318 causing stop codon at 334 | Truncated protein; intracellular aggregation (no polymerization), degradation and no secreted protein | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case reports (individuals of Chinese descent) |
| QO Isola di Procida | Δ17 Kb inc. exons II–V | No detectable α1-antitrypsin mRNA | Emphysema reported in Mprocida compound heterozygote | Case report |
| QO Lisbon | Thr68Ile | Truncated protein; not secreted | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes. 50% normal serum α1-antitrypsin in M/QO Lisbon heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Ludwisghafen | Ile92 Asn | Disruption of tertiary structure; intracellular degradation and no detectable serum protein | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Mattawa (M1allele)131/QO Ourém (M3 allele)132 | Leu353Phe causing stop codon at 376 | Truncated protein; misfolding and reduced serum levels | Emphysema reported in homozygotes | Case reports |
| QO Riedenburg | Whole gene deletion | No gene expression | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes/compound heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Saarbueken | 1158dupC causing stop codon at 376 | Truncated protein; not secreted | High risk of emphysema in homozygotes. 50% normal serum α1-antitrypsin in M/QO Saarbueken heterozygotes | Case report |
| QO Trastevere | Try194 stop codon | Reduced mRNA, degradation of truncated protein; not secreted | Emphysema reported in compound heterozygote | Case report |
| QO West | ΔGly164 | Aberrant mRNA splicing, intracellular degradation and no detectable serum protein | Emphysema reported in compound heterozygote | Case report |
Figure 1(A) Inhibition of neutrophil elastase by α1-antitrypsin. After docking (left) the neutrophil elastase (grey) is inactivated by movement from the upper to the lower pole of the protein (right). This is associated with insertion of the reactive loop (red) as an extra strand into β-sheet A (green). Reproduced from Lomas et al136 with permission. (B) The structure of α1-antitrypsin is centered on β-sheet A (green) and the mobile reactive center loop (red). Polymer formation results from the Z variant of α1-antitrypsin (Glu342 Lys at P17; arrowed) or mutations in the shutter domain (blue circle) that open β-sheet A to favor partial loop insertion (step 1) and the formation of an unstable intermediate (M*). The patent β-sheet A can either accept the loop of another molecule (step 2) to form a dimer (D), which then extends into polymers (P). A small proportion of the unstable serpin molecules can accept their own loop (step 3) to form an inactive, thermostable, latent conformation (L). The individual molecules of α1-antitrypsin within the polymer are colored red, yellow, and blue. Reproduced from Gooptu et al29 with permission.
Figure 2(A) Electron microscopy (×20,000) of a hepatocyte from a Z homozygote showing a massive inclusion (arrowed) in the endoplasmic reticulum. Reproduced from Lomas et al18 with permission. (B) The intra-hepatic polymers of mutant Z α1-antitrypsin have the appearance of beads on a string on electron microscopy. Reproduced from Lomas et al137 with permission.
Studies of α1-antitrypsin replacement therapy
| Author(s) | Study type | Primary (secondary) outcome measure(s) | Salient results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seersholm et al | Observational study with concurrent controls | FEV1 decline | – Slower FEV1 decline in treated group Most marked benefit in those with FEV1 31%–65% predicted |
| NHLBI study | Observational study with concurrent controls | FEV1 decline; Mortality | – No overall difference in FEV1 decline Slower FEV1 decline in those with FEV1 30%–64% predicted Faster decline in those with FEV1 > 75% predicted – Decreased mortality in treated group |
| Wencker et al | Observational study of patients pre- and during treatment | FEV1 decline | – Overall slower FEV1 decline on treatment Most significant benefit in those with FEV1 > 65% no significant difference in those with FEV1 30%–65% |
| Tonelli et al | Observational study with concurrent controls | FEV1 decline (mortality) | – Slower decline in treated group if FEV1< 50% predicted and ex-smoker. Faster decline in treated group if FEV1 > 60%. – No difference in mortality |
| Dirksen et al | Double-blind placebo controlled RCT | FEV1/DLCO decline, (CT densitometry) | – No difference in FEV1 or DLCO – Trend towards slower annual loss of lung density in treated group |
| Dirksen et al | Double-blind placebo controlled RCT | CT densitometry (lung function, health status, exacerbations) | – Trend towards reduction in lung density loss in treated group – No difference in FEV1 or DLCO – No difference in exacerbation rate but exacerbations less severe in treated group |
| Gøtzsche and Johansen | Review of RCTs | Mortality, FEV1 decline | – Reduction in lung density loss in treated group over whole trial period – Trend towards faster FEV1 decline in treated group ( |
| Stockley et al | Integrated analysis of RCTs | CT densitometry, FEV1 decline | – Reduction in lung density loss in treated group ( – Trend towards faster FEV 1 decline in treated group ( |
| Lieberman | Patient survey | Exacerbation frequency | – Reduction in exacerbation frequency from 3–5 per annum to 0–1 per annum following initiation of treatment |
| Stockley et al | Clinical study using BAL from patients on α1-antitrypsin replacement | Sputum inflammatory markers | – Sputum LTB4 significantly reduced following weekly 60 mg/kg α1-antitrypsin replacement. – Non-significant reductions in IL-8 and MPO |
Abbreviations: BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; DLCO, diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide; CT, computed tomography; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; IL-8, interleukin 8; LTB4, leukotriene B4; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NHLBI, national heart lung and blood institute; RCTs, randomized controlled trials.