| Literature DB >> 30061864 |
Andreas Hoeflich1, Robert David2,3, Rikke Hjortebjerg4,5.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death around the world and the insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-system has multiple functions for the pathological conditions of atherosclerosis. IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) are widely investigated as biomarkers for pathological disorders, including those of the heart. At the tissue level, IGFBP-1 to -6 decrease bioactivity of IGF-I and -II due to their high affinity IGF-binding sites. By contrast, in the circulation, the IGFBPs increase biological half-life of the IGFs and may therefore be regarded as positive regulators of IGF-effects. The IGFBPs may also exert IGF-independent functions inside or outside the cell. Importantly, the circulating IGFBP-concentrations are regulated by trophic, metabolic, and reproductive hormones. In a multitude of studies of healthy subjects and patients with coronary heart diseases, various significant associations between circulating IGFBP-levels and defined parameters have been reported. However, the complex hormonal and conditional control of IGFBPs may explain the lack of clear associations between IGFBPs and parameters of cardiac failure in broader studies including larger populations. Furthermore, the IGFBPs are subject to posttranslational modifications and proteolytic degradation by proteases, upon which the IGFs are released. In this review, we emphasize that, with the exception of IGFBP-4 and in sharp contrast to the preclinical studies, virtually all clinical studies do not have structural or functional information on their biomarker. The use of analytical systems with no discriminatory potential toward intact vs. fragmented IGFBPs represents a major issue in IGFBP-related biomarker research and an important focus point for the future. Overall, measurements of selected IGFBPs or more complex IGFBP-signatures of the family of IGFBPs have potential to identify pathophysiological alterations in the heart or patients with high cardiovascular risk, particularly if defined cohorts are to be assessed. However, a more thorough understanding of the dynamic IGF-IGFBP system as well as its proteases and protease inhibitors in both normal physiology and in cardiovascular diseases is necessary.Entities:
Keywords: IGF; IGFBP; IGFBP-fragment; PAPP-A; cardiovascular diseases; mortality
Year: 2018 PMID: 30061864 PMCID: PMC6054974 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Biomarker potential of IGFBPs in ischemic heart disease.
| 1 | Aortic plaques | SMC proliferation (+) plaque stability (+) | mRNA | ( |
| 1 | Diabetic | CV risk factors: insulin (–), blood pressure (–) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | Aged (m: 70–89 y) | CV risk factors (–) | IFA | ( |
| 1 | AMI | IGFBP-1 (–) | IRMA | ( |
| 1 | Heart failure | Heart failure (+) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | CAD | Severity of CAD (+) | ELISA | ( |
| 1 | Diabetic and AMI | Morbidity and CV mortality (+) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | ACS | Copeptin as a marker of AMI (no effect) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | Diabetic | Carotid IMT thickness (+) | IFA | ( |
| 1 | Aged (m: 65–84 y) | CV and CHD mortality (+) | IFA | ( |
| 1 | AMI survivor (45–70 y) | Heart failure (+) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | Healthy (45–70 y) | Heart failure (+) | RIA | ( |
| 1 | CAD | Severity of CAD (+) | ELISA | ( |
| 1 | Aged (51–98 y) | CVD mortality (–) | IRMA | ( |
| 1 | Male (70–89 y) | Cardiovascular mortality risk (no effect) | IFA | ( |
| 1 | Aged | Coronary complications (no effect) | ELISA | ( |
| 2 | Diabetic | Cardiovascular risk factors (–) | RIA | ( |
| 2 | IHD | Death/MI (+) | n.p. | ( |
| 2 | Diabetic and controls | Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (–) | IDS-iSys | ( |
| 2 | Aged (≥80 y) | Mortality (+) | RIA | ( |
| 2 | Aged (63–82 y) | Arterial IMT (–) | ELISA | ( |
| 3 | AMI | IGFBP-3 (+) | IRMA | ( |
| 3 | Healthy | IHD later in life (+) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | CHD | IGFBP-3 (+) | EIA | ( |
| 3 | Male | Total cholesterol (+), LDL (+) | IRMA | ( |
| 3 | Hypertension | Carotid atherosclerosis (+) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | Aged (63–82 y) | Plaque instability (+) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | Moderate IHD | Ischemic heart failure (–) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | Adult (40–60 y) | CHD (–) | ELISA | ( |
| 3 | Aged (≥65 y) | Incident coronary events (–) | ELISA | ( |
| 3 | MI | IGFBP-3 (–) | ELISA | ( |
| 3 | CHD | IGFBP-3 (–) | ELISA | ( |
| 3 | Adult/aged (≥45 y) | carotid IMT (–) | CIA | ( |
| 3 | Female (51–68 y) | MI (no effect) | SIA | ( |
| 3 | Subjects (45–79 y) | CAD (no effect) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | Subjects (40–79 y) | Mortality (no effect) | RIA | ( |
| 3 | STEMI/NSTEMI | ACS (no effect) | RIA | ( |
| 4 | Diabetic and controls | Carotid artery remodeling (NT-IGFBP-4) and accelerated atherosclerosis | TR-IFMA | ( |
| 4 | ACS | PAPP-A (+) | n.a./WIB | ( |
| 4 | MI-suspected | MACE (NT-/CT-IGFBP-4 +) | IA | ( |
| 4 | CVD | long-term outcome (NT-/CT-IGFBP-4: no effect) | IA | ( |
| 4 | Diabetic | CV mortality (NT-/CT-IGFBP-4 +) | TR-IFMA | ( |
| 4 | STEMI | CV mortality (NT-/CT-IGFBP-4 +) | TR-IFMA | ( |
| 5 | CHD | IGFBP-5 (+) | RIA | ( |
| 5 | CHD and healthy controls | Apo A1 (+) HDL-C (+) | RIA | ( |
ACS, acute coronary syndrome, AMI, acute myocardial infarction; CAD: coronary artery disease; CHD, coronary heart disease; CIA, chemiluminescence immunoassay; CT-/NT-, carboxyl-/amino-terminal); CV, cardiovascular; CVD, cardiovascular disease; EIA, enzyme immunoassay; H/LDL, high-/low-density lipoprotein; IA, immunoassay; IDS-iSYS, Immunodiagnostic Systems (automated immunoassay analyzer); IFA, immunofluorometric assay; IHD, ischemic heart disease; IMT, intima-media thickness; IRMA, immunoradiometric assay; MACE, major adverse cardiac event; MI, myocardial infarction; n.a., not applicable; n.p., not provided by the authors; N/STEMI, no/elevation of the ST segment; PAPP-A, pregnancy associated plasma protein A; RIA, radioimmunoassay; SIA, 2-step sandwich-type immunoassay; TR-IFMAs, time-resolved immunofluorometric assay; WIB, Western immunoblot.