[Frontiers in Bioscience 15, 1-11, January 1, 2010]

Alpha-hemoglobin stabilizing protein: molecular function and clinical correlation

Chairat Turbpaiboon, Prapon Wilairat

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Rama 6 Road, Bangkok 10400, Thailand

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. Biophysical and functional Studies
3.1. AHSP function
3.2. Molecular structure and interaction
3.3. Mechanism of alpha-Hb stabilization
4. AHSP gene and expression
5. Clinical correlation
5.1. AHSP-alpha-Hb interaction: quantitative aspect
5.2. AHSP-alpha-Hb interaction: qualitative aspect
6. Conclusions
7. References

1. ABSTRACT

The discovery of alpha-hemoglobin stabilizing protein (AHSP), a chaperone for free alpha-hemoglobin (alpha-Hb), has provided a satisfactory solution to the perplexing problem of balanced globin levels for Hb production in erythroid cells in the face of a two-fold excess of alpha-globin to beta-globin gene dosage. Unmatched alpha-Hb is unstable and precipitates onto membranes, where the released heme exerts oxidative damages resulting in ineffective erythropoiesis and hemolytic anemia, the underlying causes of pathology in the hereditary anemia of beta-thalassemia. The interaction of alpha-Hb with AHSP involves surfaces normally employed in binding to beta-Hb. However, a conformational change to the AHSP-bound alpha-Hb results in an oxidized heme, but in a pocket that is now less exposed to the outside environment, thereby protecting against both peroxide-induced heme loss and iron-induced redox reaction. Studies in both mice and humans indicate that reduction in AHSP can result in hematological pathology. Conversely, alpha-Hb variants that are compromised in their ability to bind with AHSP produce beta-thalassemia-like symptoms. Disease conditions like some forms of thalassemia that are directly associated with AHSP structural and/or functional defects can now be included within the category of chaperonopathies.