| Literature DB >> 33805974 |
Mercedes Unzeta1, Mar Hernàndez-Guillamon2, Ping Sun3, Montse Solé2.
Abstract
The semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO), also known as vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) or primary amine oxidase (PrAO), is a deaminating enzyme highly expressed in vessels that generates harmful products as a result of its enzymatic activity. As a multifunctional enzyme, it is also involved in inflammation through its ability to bind and promote the transmigration of circulating leukocytes into inflamed tissues. Inflammation is present in different systemic and cerebral diseases, including stroke and Alzheimer's disease (AD). These pathologies show important affectations on cerebral vessels, together with increased SSAO levels. This review summarizes the main roles of SSAO/VAP-1 in human physiology and pathophysiology and discusses the mechanisms by which it can affect the onset and progression of both stroke and AD. As there is an evident interrelationship between stroke and AD, basically through the vascular system dysfunction, the possibility that SSAO/VAP-1 could be involved in the transition between these two pathologies is suggested. Hence, its inhibition is proposed to be an interesting therapeutical approach to the brain damage induced in these both cerebral pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; SSAO/VAP-1; blood–brain barrier dysfunction; inflammation; neurovascular unit; oxidative stress; stroke; vascular damage
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805974 PMCID: PMC8036996 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO)/ vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) tissue localization, cell type expression, physiological substrates proved to be metabolized by these tissues and physiological function. Note the absence of SSAO/VAP-1 expression in cerebral parenchymal cells (neurons and glia). Benzylamine is a non-physiological substrate of SSAO metabolized by SSAOs from different origins. Data are summarized from [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44].
| Tissue | Cell Type | Substrate | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cerebrovascular tissue (meninges and microvessels) | Endothelial cells | Methylamine (derived from epinephrine, adrenaline, creatine, sarcosine and choline) | Scavenger of endogenous dietary amines |
| Vascularized tissues (heart, kidney, lung, intestine, liver, retina and lymph nodes) and blood vessels (human, pig, rat, rabbit, bovine) | Endothelial cells | Phenylethylamine | Metabolism of physiological circulating amines and xenobiotic ones |
| Adipose tissue | Adipocytes (white and brown) | Various endogenous and exogenous amines | Metabolism of endogenous amines |
| Ureter and vas deferens | Non-vascular smooth muscle cells | Dopamine | Metabolism of physiological amines and xenobiotic ones |
| Endometrium (human) | Pericytes | Methylamine | Recruiting innate immune cells |
| Skin (guinea pig) | Fibroblasts | Histamine | Metabolism of physiological amines and xenobiotic ones |
| Dental pulp | Odontoblasts | Serotonin | Contribution to inflammatory response in dental pulp (pulpitis) |
SSAO/VAP-1 is involved in the binding/transmigration of different types of leukocytes, but not of other types. This selectivity also depends on the organ studied and the inflammatory stimulus.
| Inflammatory Stimulus | Organ/Tissue | Type of Leukocytes Bound by SSAO/VAP-1 | Type of Leukocytes not Bound by SSAO/VAP-1 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemia/reperfusion | Kidney | Neutrophils | Macrophages/T-lymphocytes | [ |
| Postischemic inflammation | Brain | Neutrophils | - | [ |
| Subarachnoid hemorrhage | Brain | Neutrophils | - | [ |
| Intracerebral hemorrhage | Brain | Neutrophils | - | [ |
| Peritonitis | Peritoneum | Granulocytes | - | |
| Air pouch inflammation | Subcutaneous | Monocytes/lymphocytes | - | [ |
| LPS | Brain | Neutrophils | - | [ |
| LPS, | Lungs | Polymorphonuclear cells, neutrophils | - | [ |
| Acute liver failure | Liver | Leukocytes | Monocytes | [ |
| ConA hepatitis | Liver | CD4+ Th2 cells | - | [ |
| Hepatic chronic inflammation and fibrosis | Liver | CD16+ monocytes | - | [ |
| Liver inflammation | Liver | CD4+ T cell | - | [ |
| Liver allograft rejection | Liver | CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes | - | [ |
| Tumors (adhesion function) | Skin | CD45+, CD3+, CD8+ | CD4+, T-reg cells, Type2 macrophages, GR-1+CD11b+ | [ |
| Tumors (enzymatic function) | Skin | CD45+, CD8+, CD11b+, granulocytes, | CD4+, type2 macrophages | [ |
| Cytokine-induced angiogenesis | Eyes | CD11b+ cells, granulocytes | - | [ |
| Diabetic retinopathy | Eyes | Leukocytes | - | [ |
| Uveitis | Eyes | CD45+ | - | [ |
| In vitro | Endothelial cells | Lymphocytes, T-killer cells | Neutrophils, monocytes | [ |
| In vitro | Endothelial cells | Polymorphonuclear leukocytes | - | [ |
| AOC3 knockout | Adipose tissue | CD45+, T cells, macrophages, natural killer | - | [ |
Physiological functions of SSAO/VAP-1 and pathological effects associated with these functions in situations where the enzyme is overexpressed. Data are summarized from [7,8,9,16,17,18,31,32,33,34,78,87,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,103,104].
| Physiological Function | Pathological Effect Upon SSAO/VAP-1 Overexpression | Involvement in Pathologies |
|---|---|---|
| Oxidative deamination of primary amines of endogenous and xenobiotic origin | Toxicity of metabolic products (formaldehyde, methylglyoxal, H2O2) | Stroke |
| Protein cross-linking and Aβ aggregation | Diabetes | |
| Oxidative stress | Atherosclerosis | |
| AGEs generation | Congestive heart failure | |
| Inflammation | Fibrotic liver disease | |
| Pathological angiogenesis | Cancer | |
| Leukocyte trafficking under inflammatory conditions | Excessive inflammatory response | MS |
| Insulinomimetic action by recruitment of GLUT4 receptors to the cell membrane | Unknown | Unknown |
Alterations of SSAO/VAP-1 levels found in human ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
| Disorder | Tissue Analyzed | Phase of the Pathology | SSAO/VAP-1 Alteration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemic stroke | Serum | <6 h (acute phase) | Increase | [ |
| Plasma | 24 h after stroke | Increase vs. 1 h | [ | |
| Plasma | 1 h after HT | Increase | [ | |
| Serum | >24 h after stroke | No change | [ | |
| Plasma | weeks after | Decrease | [ | |
| Ipsilateral brain | - | Decrease | [ | |
| Ipsilateral brain | - | Increase | [ | |
| Hemorrhagic stroke (ICH) | Plasma | 3–4 h after ICH | Increase | [ |
| Contralateral brain | - | Increase | [ | |
| AD | Plasma | moderate-severe | Increase | [ |
| Plasma | - | Increase | [ | |
| Brain vessels | - | Increase | [ | |
| Hippocampus | - | Increase | [ | |
| Brain vessels | - | Increase | [ | |
| Brain vessels | - | Increase | [ |
Figure 1Summary of the pathogenic mechanisms of SSAO/VAP-1 in exacerbating the progress of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)-AD. Through the generation of toxic metabolites from SSAO activity (ammonia, methylgioxal, formaldehyde, and H2O2), SSAO/VAP-1 induces the vascular degeneration on both endothelial and smooth muscle cells through several mechanisms: (i) oxidative stress, (ii) induction of apoptosis through the mitochondrial pathway, (iii) induction of the expression of pro-inflammatory molecules (selectins, VCAM, ICAM…), (iv) induction of protein and lipid crosslinking, and (v) increase in Aβ aggregation. The resulting vascular degeneration, together with the protein and lipid crosslinkage and the Aβ aggregation contribute to the vascular degeneration and the CAA pathology, and these generate a positive feedback loop reinforcing SSAO/VAP-1 overexpression. Aβ aggregation itself also contributes to the SSAO/VAP-1 increase.
Figure 2Structure of the multi-target directed-ligand (MTDL) donepezil-propargylamine-8-hydroxyquinoline, DPH4 [221].