| Literature DB >> 32063701 |
Rob Janssen1, Emiel Fm Wouters2, Wim Janssens3, Willeke F Daamen4, Paul Hagedoorn5, Hugo Ajm de Wit6, Jef Serré3, Ghislaine Gayan-Ramirez3, Frits Me Franssen2, Niki L Reynaert2, Jan H von der Thüsen7, Henderik W Frijlink5.
Abstract
Current pharmacotherapy of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) aims at reducing respiratory symptoms and exacerbation frequency. Effective therapies to reduce disease progression, however, are still lacking. Furthermore, COPD medications showed less favorable effects in emphysema than in other COPD phenotypes. Elastin fibers are reduced and disrupted, whereas collagen levels are increased in emphysematous lungs. Protease/antiprotease imbalance has historically been regarded as the sole cause of emphysema. However, it is nowadays appreciated that emphysema may also be provoked by perturbations in the sequential repair steps following elastolysis. Essentiality of fibulin-5 and lysyl oxidase-like 1 in the elastin restoration process is discussed, and it is argued that copper deficiency is a plausible reason for failing elastin repair in emphysema patients. Since copper-dependent lysyl oxidases crosslink elastin as well as collagen fibers, copper supplementation stimulates accumulation of both proteins in the extracellular matrix. Restoration of abnormal elastin fibers in emphysematous lungs is favorable, whereas stimulating pulmonary fibrosis formation by further increasing collagen concentrations and organization is detrimental. Heparin inhibits collagen crosslinking while stimulating elastin repair and might therefore be the ideal companion of copper for emphysema patients. Efficacy and safety considerations may lead to a preference of pulmonary administration of copper-heparin over systemic administration.Entities:
Keywords: collagen; copper; desmosine; elastin; emphysema; fibulin-5; heparin; lysyl oxidase; lysyl oxidase-like protein 1; tropoelastin
Year: 2019 PMID: 32063701 PMCID: PMC6884741 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S228411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Tropoelastin monomers (1) aggregate into polymers (2). Lysine is transformed by copper-dependent lysyl oxidase (LOX-Cu2+) into highly reactive allysine (3). Three allysines and one untransformed lysine on adjacent fibers spontaneously condense into one (iso)desmosine amino acid (depicted as a hexagon; 4).
Figure 2Smoking induces inflammation, which is associated with enhanced proteolytic activity leading to accelerated elastin degradation. Damage to elastic fibers upregulates synthesis of elastin repair proteins and increases copper demand to activate additional LOXL1 enzymes. This may deplete copper stores, which may lead to decreased LOXL1 activity and impaired elastin repair. Cigarette smoke also has direct inhibitory effects on LOXL1 activity. A vicious circle of elastolysis and copper depletion may arise (bold arrows), as partially degraded elastin is more accessible to proteases than intact fibers. Copper supplementation may provide an escape from the vicious circle by activating LOXL1 and facilitating efficacious elastin repair (dashed arrows). Green=positive effect, yellow=neutral effect and red=negative effect.
Figure 3Immunohistochemistry image of an explant lung from a patient with combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema showing increased lysyl oxidase-like protein 1 (LOXL1) levels in fibrotic areas and decreased LOXL1 levels in emphysematous areas (brown=LOXL1; blue=nucleus; pink=cytoplasm).
Reasons For Adding Heparin To Copper Inhalation Formulations
| Property | Mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|
| Stimulating elastin repair | Facilitating self-assembly of tropoelastin monomers into polymers by neutralizing positively charged amino acids | [ |
| Preventing fibrosis formation | Inhibiting lysyl oxidase-mediated collagen crosslinking and thereby organization, stabilization and accumulation of collagen | [ |
| Reducing copper dose and thereby risk of copper toxicity | Retaining copper ions in the lungs by being taken up and stored in macrophages and potentially also by interacting with positively charged components of the airways and airspaces | [ |
Figure 4Inhalation therapy with copper stimulates elastin repair by activating LOXL1. Inhaled copper monotherapy, however, also stimulates lung fibrosis formation by stimulating collagen crosslinking, stabilization and accumulation. Furthermore, high-dose copper is needed when administered as monotherapy, since unbound copper rapidly passes the alveolar-capillary membrane. This increases the risk of extrapulmonary copper toxicity. Addition of heparin retains copper in the pulmonary compartment, which makes that lower copper doses suffice. Heparin also has an inhibitory effect on collagen crosslinking while stimulating elastin repair by promoting aggregation of tropoelastin. Green=positive effect, yellow=neutral effect and red=negative effect.
Particle Size Distribution Of Nebulized Copper-Heparin Solutions
| Cu2+ | Heparin | X10 | X50 | X90 | Particles <5μm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 mg | 5000 I.U. | 0.81 μm | 2.34 μm | 6.58 μm | 82.44% |
| 0.80 μm | 2.29 μm | 6.34 μm | 83.58% | ||
| 1.0 mg | 100,000 I.U. | 0.80 μm | 2.32 μm | 6.86 μm | 82.13% |
| 0.80 μm | 2.33 μm | 7.05 μm | 81.19% |
Notes: The first nebulizing solution consisted of 26 mg (5000 IU) heparin sodium and 1.25 mg copper sulfate (CuSO4; 0.5 mg copper) dissolved in 5 mL saline. The second nebulizing solution consisted of 5 mL saline plus 524 mg (100,000 IU) heparin and 2.5 mg CuSO4 (1.0 mg copper). Formulations were loaded into a reusable nebulizer (PARI LC® Plus) and nebulized with a compressor (PARI BOY® SX). The aerosols were analyzed every 30 second in duplicate by laser diffraction analysis using a HELOS BR laser diffractometer in combination with the INHALER system (Sympatec, Germany) until the nebulizer started to sputter.