Abstract

α1-Antitrypsin is primarily synthesised in the liver, circulates to the lung and protects pulmonary tissues from proteolytic damage. The Z mutant (Glu342Lys) undergoes inactivating conformational change and polymerises. Polymers are retained within the hepatocyte endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in homozygous (PiZZ) individuals, predisposing the individuals to hepatic cirrhosis and emphysema. Latency is an analogous process of inactivating, intra-molecular conformational change and may co-occur with polymerisation. However, the relationship between latency and polymerisation remained unexplored in the absence of a suitable probe. We have developed a novel monoclonal antibody specific for latent α1-antitrypsin and used it in combination with a polymer-specific antibody, to assess the association of both conformers in vitro, in disease and during augmentation therapy. In vitro kinetics analysis showed polymerisation dominated the pathway but latency could be promoted by stabilising monomeric α1-antitrypsin. Polymers were extensively produced in hepatocytes and a cell line expressing Z α1-antitrypsin but the latent protein was not detected despite manipulation of the secretory pathway. However, α1-antitrypsin augmentation therapy contains latent α1-antitrypsin, as did the plasma of 63/274 PiZZ individuals treated with augmentation therapy but 0/264 who were not receiving this medication (p<10−14). We conclude that latent α1-antitrypsin is a by-product of the polymerisation pathway, that the intracellular folding environment is resistant to formation of the latent conformer but that augmentation therapy introduces latent α1-antitrypsin into the circulation. A suite of monoclonal antibodies and methodologies developed in this study can characterise α1-antitrypsin folding and conformational transitions, and screen methods to improve augmentation therapy.

Highlights

  • Samples that gave a positive signal for latent ␣1-antitrypsin were analysed in step (ii) in which the plates were coated with 5 ␮g/ml 1F10 monoclonal antibody (MAb) that binds both latent and cleaved ␣1-antitrypsin

  • Little latent ␣1-antitrypsin was detected in human liver tissues from PiZZ ␣1-antitrypsin individuals with advanced cirrhosis

  • Polymers were detected in plasma of all PiZZ individuals, whereas the latent ␣1-antitrypsin detected in circulation was shown to have arisen from the augmentation therapy

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Summary

Introduction

The Z allele of ␣1-antitrypsin (Glu342Lys) causes 85-90% of the protein to misfold, undergo inactivating conformational change and either be degraded or form polymers that are retained within hepatocytes. Polymerisation of Z ␣1-antitrypsin is a central event in the pathogenesis of ␣1-antitrypsin deficiency It arises through aberrant structural behaviour within the ␣1-antitrypsin molecule that subverts a process of conformational change that is essential for normal function (Fig. 1B). Polymers of ␣1-antitrypsin are present in the circulation of PiZZ individuals (Janciauskiene et al, 2002; Schmid et al, 2012; Tan et al, 2014) and have been detected in the lung, kidney and skin (Elliott et al, 1998; Gross et al, 2009; Lawless et al, 2004; Mahadeva et al, 2005; Morris et al, 2011; Paakko et al, 1996; Venembre et al, 1994). Studies using the polymer-specific 2C1 monoclonal antibody (MAb) have shown that there are multiple forms of polymer depending on the conditions used to generate the polymer in vitro (Ekeowa et al, 2010; Miranda et al, 2010)

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