Department of Chemistry, Center of Membrane Sciences, Sanders-Brown Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506-0055, USA.
Department of Biochemical Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185, Rome, Italy.
Neurobiol Dis. 2014 Feb;62:144-59. doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2013.09.018. Epub 2013 Oct 2.
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia among the elderly and is characterized by progressive loss of memory and cognition. These clinical features are due in part to the increase of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species that mediate neurotoxic effects. The up-regulation of the heme oxygenase-1/biliverdin reductase-A (HO-1/BVR-A) system is one of the earlier events in the adaptive response to stress. HO-1/BVR-A reduces the intracellular levels of pro-oxidant heme and generates equimolar amounts of the free radical scavengers biliverdin-IX alpha (BV)/bilirubin-IX alpha (BR) as well as the pleiotropic gaseous neuromodulator carbon monoxide (CO) and ferrous iron. Two main and opposite hypotheses for a role of the HO-1/BVR-A system in AD propose that this system mediates neurotoxic and neuroprotective effects, respectively. This apparent controversy was mainly due to the fact that for over about 20years HO-1 was the only player on which all the analyses were focused, excluding the other important and essential component of the entire system, BVR. Following studies from the Butterfield laboratory that reported alterations in BVR activity along with decreased phosphorylation and increased oxidative/nitrosative post-translational modifications in the brain of subjects with AD and amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) subjects, a debate was opened on the real pathophysiological and clinical significance of BVR-A. In this paper we provide a review of the main discoveries about the HO/BVR system in AD and MCI, and propose a mechanism that reconciles these two hypotheses noted above of neurotoxic and the neuroprotective aspects of this important stress responsive system.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是老年人中最常见的痴呆症形式,其特征是记忆和认知能力逐渐丧失。这些临床特征部分归因于活性氧和氮物种的增加,这些物质介导神经毒性作用。血红素加氧酶-1/胆红素还原酶-A(HO-1/BVR-A)系统的上调是应激适应性反应的早期事件之一。HO-1/BVR-A 降低细胞内促氧化剂血红素的水平,并产生等摩尔量的自由基清除剂胆绿素-IX alpha(BV)/胆红素-IX alpha(BR)以及多效气态神经调节剂一氧化碳(CO)和亚铁。HO-1/BVR-A 系统在 AD 中作用的两个主要且相反的假设分别提出,该系统分别介导神经毒性和神经保护作用。这种明显的争议主要是由于大约 20 年来,HO-1 是唯一的参与者,所有的分析都集中在这个系统上,排除了整个系统中另一个重要和必需的组成部分,BVR。在 Butterfield 实验室的后续研究报告了 AD 和遗忘型轻度认知障碍(MCI)患者大脑中 BVR 活性的改变,以及磷酸化减少和氧化/硝化后翻译修饰增加之后,关于 BVR-A 的真正病理生理和临床意义的争论就被打开了。在本文中,我们回顾了 HO/BVR 系统在 AD 和 MCI 中的主要发现,并提出了一个机制,该机制调和了上述关于该重要应激反应系统的神经毒性和神经保护方面的两个假设。