Abstract

α1-Microglobulin is a 26 kDa plasma and tissue glycoprotein that belongs to the lipocalin protein superfamily. Recent reports show that it is a reductase and radical scavenger and that it binds heme and has heme-degrading properties. This study has investigated the protective effects of α1-microglobulin against oxidation by heme and reactive oxygen species in the human erythroid cell line, K562. The results show that α1-microglobulin prevents intracellular oxidation and up-regulation of heme oxygenase-1 induced by heme, hydrogen peroxide and Fenton reaction-generated hydroxyl radicals in the culture medium. It also reduces the cytosol of non-oxidized cells. Endogeneous expression of α1-microglobulin was up-regulated by these oxidants and silencing of the α1-microglobulin expression increased the cytosol oxidation. α1-microglobulin also inhibited cell death caused by heme and cleared cells from bound heme. Binding of heme to α1-microglobulin increased the radical reductase activity of the protein as compared to the apo-protein. Finally, α1-microglobulin was localized mainly at the cell surface both when administered exogeneously and in non-treated cells. The results suggest that α1-microglobulin is involved in the defence against oxidative cellular injury caused by haemoglobin and heme and that the protein may employ both heme-scavenging and one-electron reduction of radicals to achieve this.

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