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Alpha-1 Antitrypsin (SERPINA1)

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protein752 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Alpha-1 Antitrypsin (SERPINA1)

Overview

Alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT), encoded by the SERPINA1 gene, is a serine protease inhibitor belonging to the serpin family of proteins. As the most abundant protease inhibitor in human blood plasma, AAT circulates at concentrations of 150-350 mg/dL under normal conditions. The protein is synthesized primarily by hepatocytes in the liver, with smaller amounts produced by neutrophils, macrophages, and other immune cells. AAT is secreted into the bloodstream where it performs critical regulatory functions to maintain tissue homeostasis. While historically recognized for its role in protecting lung tissue from neutrophil elastase-mediated degradation, emerging evidence demonstrates that AAT plays unexpected protective roles in the central nervous system, with potential implications for multiple neurodegenerative disorders.

Function/Biology

AAT functions as a tight-binding inhibitor of serine proteases, particularly neutrophil elastase, but also cathepsin G, proteinase 3, and other related proteases. The protein operates through a canonical serpin mechanism: its reactive center loop presents a substrate-like peptide sequence that proteases recognize and attempt to cleave. When proteases engage this bait region, AAT undergoes a dramatic conformational change that traps and irreversibly inactivates the enzyme, forming a stable enzyme-inhibitor complex that is subsequently cleared by hepatic receptors.

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