Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Chemical chaperones mediate increased secretion of mutant α1-antitrypsin (α1-AT) Z: A potential pharmacological strategy for prevention of liver injury and emphysema in α1-AT deficiency

430

Citations

24

References

2000

Year

TLDR

α1‑AT deficiency causes a misfolded α1‑ATZ protein to accumulate in the liver endoplasmic reticulum, leading to reduced circulating α1‑AT that predisposes to emphysema and hepatotoxicity. The study investigates whether chemical chaperones can enhance secretion of mutant α1‑ATZ. PBA markedly increased secretion of functional α1‑ATZ in vitro and in PiZ mice, raising blood levels to 20–50% of normal and indicating that partial correction may prevent liver and lung injury, making PBA a promising chemoprophylactic agent.

Abstract

In α1-AT deficiency, a misfolded but functionally active mutant α1-ATZ (α1-ATZ) molecule is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum of liver cells rather than secreted into the blood and body fluids. Emphysema is thought to be caused by the lack of circulating α1-AT to inhibit neutrophil elastase in the lung. Liver injury is thought to be caused by the hepatotoxic effects of the retained α1-ATZ. In this study, we show that several “chemical chaperones,” which have been shown to reverse the cellular mislocalization or misfolding of other mutant plasma membrane, nuclear, and cytoplasmic proteins, mediate increased secretion of α1-ATZ. In particular, 4-phenylbutyric acid (PBA) mediated a marked increase in secretion of functionally active α1-ATZ in a model cell culture system. Moreover, oral administration of PBA was well tolerated by PiZ mice (transgenic for the human α1-ATZ gene) and consistently mediated an increase in blood levels of human α1-AT reaching 20–50% of the levels present in PiM mice and normal humans. Because clinical studies have suggested that only partial correction is needed for prevention of both liver and lung injury in α1-AT deficiency and PBA has been used safely in humans, it constitutes an excellent candidate for chemoprophylaxis of target organ injury in α1-AT deficiency.

References

YearCitations

Page 1