| Literature DB >> 30038906 |
Abstract
Partial enzymatic degradation of human serum albumin in vivo can lead to the generation of peptides with novel functions or to peptides that might serve as biomarkers for disease. In pathological conditions, biomarkers are possibly produced from the protein in the lysosomes and set free by cell death, or cell death could release acid endoproteases which produce biomarkers by degrading extracellular albumin. Alternatively, lysosomes or secretory granules can be stimulated to release enzymes which produce bioactive peptides from albumin. In physiological conditions, it is proposed that bioactive peptides can be made by enzymatic attack on the protein bound to the endosomal neonatal Fc receptor. The peptides formed could leave the cell, together with native albumin, by exocytosis. Thus, the receptor could have a new function in addition to saving albumin from degradation in the lysosomes. Large amounts of albumin are degraded every day, and this fact can compensate for the short in vivo half-lives of the bioactive peptides. One or more of the procedures outlined above could also apply to other plasma proteins or to structural proteins.Entities:
Keywords: FcRn receptor; albumin; bioactive peptides; biomarkers; endosome; enzymatic degradation; fragments; lysosome
Year: 2018 PMID: 30038906 PMCID: PMC6046381 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2018.00063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Bioactive peptides and biomarkers derived from human serum albumin.
| 1 | 1–18 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEEN | Urine | Biomarker for renal disease | Chalmers et al., | |
| 2 | 1–18 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEEN | Urine | Biomarker for acute kidney injury | Metzger et al., | |
| 3 | 1–18 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEEN | Urine | Biomarker for chronic kidney disease | Good et al., | |
| 4 | 1–19 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENF | Blood | Machtejevas et al., | ||
| 5 | 1–19 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENF | Urine | Predictor for graft-vs. -host disease after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation | Weissinger et al., | |
| 6 | 1–20 (21)(23) | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENFK (A)(LV) | Blood | Machtejevas et al., | ||
| 7 | 1–21 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENFKA | BALF | BPD | Vento et al., | |
| 8 | 1–21 | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENFKA | Blood | Copper binding site | Richter et al., | |
| 9 | 1–21 (22)(23) | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENFKA (L)(V) | Urine | Biomarker for diabetic nephropathy | Alkhalaf et al., | |
| 10 | 1–24 (26) | DAHKSEVAHRFKDLGEENFKA LVL(IA) | Blood | Kausler and Spiteller, | ||
| 11 | 25–30 | IAFAQY | Blood | Kausler and Spiteller, | ||
| 12 | 65–70 | SLHTLF | Cabin-A1 | HSA | Inhibitor of Cathepsin B | Nakagomi et al., |
| 13 | 115–186 | LVRP…….DELR | HSA | Insulin stimulation and activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase | Ueno et al., | |
| 14 | 138–144 | YLYEIAR | Acein-1 | Plasma | ACE-inhibitor | Nakagomi et al., |
| 15 | 142–149 | IARRHPYF | HRP | Plasma | Histamine release from mast cells and activation of leukocytes | Carraway et al., |
| 16 | 149–159 | FYAPELLFFAK | Bile | Biomarker for bile duct diseases | Lankisch et al., | |
| 17 | 213–214 | AW | HSA | ACE-inhibitor | Nakagomi et al., | |
| 18 | 210–218 | AFKAWAVAR | Albutensin A | HSA | ACE-inhibitor | Nakagomi et al., |
| 19 | 210–218 | AFKAWAVAR | Albutensin A | HSA | Inhibitor of Cathepsin B | Nakagomi et al., |
| 20 | 330–333 | FLYE | Blood | Kausler and Spiteller, | ||
| 21 | 399–406 | GEYKFQNA | BALF | BPD | Vento et al., | |
| 22 | 403–407 | FQNAL | Cabin-A2 | HSA | Inhibitor of Cathepsin B | Nakagomi et al., |
| 23 | 407–423 (425) | LLVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL(VE) | Blood | Machtejevas et al., | ||
| 24 | (407)(408) 409–423 | (L)(L)VRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Blood | Activate the MRGPRX2 receptor in mast cells | Karhu et al., | |
| 25 | 408–423 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Urine | Biomarker for renal disease | Chalmers et al., | |
| 26 | 408–423 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Blood | Biomarker for renal disease | Mohr et al., | |
| 27 | 408–423 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Urine | Predictor for graft-vs. -host disease after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation | Kaiser et al., | |
| 28 | 408–423 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | EPI-X4 | Blood | Interacts with the CXCR4-receptor | Zirafi et al., |
| 29 | 408–423 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Urine | Biomarker for prostate cancer | Theodorescu et al., | |
| 30 | 408–425 | LVRYTKKVPQVSTPTLVE | Urine | Biomarker for IgA nephropathy | Haubitz et al., | |
| 31 | 409–423 | VRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | P-1 | HSA | Histamine release from mast cells | Sugiyama et al., |
| 32 | 409–423 | VRYTKKVPQVSTPTL | Blood | Machtejevas et al., | ||
| 33 | 497–506 | YVPKEFNAET | Urine | Biomarker for major depressive disorder | Wang et al., |
The fragments are numbered from the N-terminal end of HSA.
Isolated from blood in the form of plasma (no. 22) or haemofiltrate (no. 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 19, 21, 24, 26, 30), from urine (no. 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 23, 25, 27, 28, 31), or from bile (no. 15), or obtained by tryptic/chymotryptic hydrolysis of HSA (no. 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 20) or plasma (no. 13) or by peptic hydrolysis of HSA (no. 29) or plasma (no. 14).
The majority of the peptides found in urine are plasma peptides excreted in the urine (Kaiser et al., .
The authors detected a total of 5 different N-terminal fragments (Metzger et al., .
The fragments are found in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), and their concentrations are increased in patients with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD).
Inhibitor of angiotensin-I-converting enzyme.
Figure 1pH-dependent, FcRn-mediated cellular transport of HSA. Initially, HSA is taken up by the cell by pinocytosis (or receptor-mediated). After uptake the protein enters early endosomes (step 1). From there it is transferred to acidified endosomes having FcRn in the membrane. At this pH of 5-6, the protein binds strongly to the receptor at a 1:1 stoichiometry (step 2). HSA which does not bind to FcRn goes to degradation in the lysosomes (step 6). While bound to FcRn in the endosomes HSA is exposed to acid endoproteases the function of which is proposed to lead to the formation of bioactive peptides and other fragments. Intact protein and the fragments could leave the cell either in the form of recycling (steps 3 and 5) or by transcytosis (steps 4 and 5). In both cases protein leaves the receptor, because at physiological pH the interaction between the two components is very week. The illustration is inspired by figure 2 in Bern et al. (2015).
Figure 2Crystal structure of the HSA-FcRn complex (Oganesyan et al., 2014). The domains (I-III) of HSA (66.5 kDa) are indicated. FcRn is composed of a long α-chain of 44 kDa (domains α1-α3) and a short β2-microglobulin unit of 12 kDa (β2m). Of these structures, only α3 has a transmembrane fragment and a cytosolic part. Domain III of HSA plays the essential role for binding, but domain I is also necessary. The sections in domain I and III marked in magenta represent the sequences 1–30 and 403–425, respectively. The figure was made with PyMol on the basis of the atomic coordinates (PDB ID: 4N0F) available at the RCSB Protein Data Bank.