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      Anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties of α1-antitrypsin without inhibition of elastase.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Acute Lung Injury, drug therapy, genetics, immunology, Adult, Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, pharmacology, Cytokines, metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Gene Expression, drug effects, Humans, Immunologic Factors, Leukocyte Elastase, antagonists & inhibitors, deficiency, Lipopolysaccharides, toxicity, Lung, pathology, physiopathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Middle Aged, Neutrophils, Pulmonary Emphysema, Recombinant Proteins, alpha 1-Antitrypsin, alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency

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          Abstract

          The rationale of α1-antitrypsin (AAT) augmentation therapy to treat progressive emphysema in AAT-deficient patients is based on inhibition of neutrophil elastase; however, the benefit of this treatment remains unclear. Here we show that clinical grade AAT (with elastase inhibitory activity) and a recombinant form of AAT (rAAT) without anti-elastase activity reduces lung inflammatory responses to LPS in elastase-deficient mice. WT and elastase-deficient mice treated with either native AAT or rAAT exhibited significant reductions in infiltrating neutrophils (23% and 68%), lavage fluid levels of TNF-α (70% and 80%), and the neutrophil chemokine KC (CXCL1) (64% and 90%), respectively. Lung parenchyma TNF-α, DNA damage-inducible transcript 3 and X-box binding protein-1 mRNA levels were reduced in both mouse strains treated with AAT; significantly lower levels of these genes, as well as IL-1β gene expression, were observed in lungs of AAT-deficient patients treated with AAT therapy compared with untreated patients. In vitro, LPS-induced cytokines from WT and elastase-deficient mouse neutrophils, as well as neutrophils of healthy humans, were similarly reduced by AAT or rAAT; human neutrophils adhering to endothelial cells were decreased by 60-80% (P < 0.001) with either AAT or rAAT. In mouse pancreatic islet macrophages, LPS-induced surface expression of MHC II, Toll-like receptor-2 and -4 were markedly lower (80%, P < 0.001) when exposed to either AAT or rAAT. Consistently, in vivo and in vitro, rAAT reduced inflammatory responses at concentrations 40- to 100-fold lower than native plasma-derived AAT. These data provide evidence that the anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties of AAT can be independent of elastase inhibition.

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