| Literature DB >> 32665403 |
Genny Degani1, Alessandra Altomare2, Stefania Digiovanni1, Beatrice Arosio3,4, Guenter Fritz5, Angela Raucci6, Giancarlo Aldini2, Laura Popolo7.
Abstract
The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) plays a key role in mammal physiology and in the etiology and progression of inflammatory and oxidative stress-based diseases. In adults, RAGE expression is normally high only in the lung where the protein concentrates in the basal membrane of alveolar Type I epithelial cells. In diseases, RAGE levels increase in the affected tissues and sustain chronic inflammation. RAGE exists as a membrane glycoprotein with an ectodomain, a transmembrane helix, and a short carboxyl-terminal tail, or as a soluble ectodomain that acts as a decoy receptor (sRAGE). VC1 domain is responsible for binding to the majority of RAGE ligands including advanced glycation end products (AGEs), S100 proteins, and HMGB1. To ascertain whether other ligands exist, we analyzed by MS the material pulled down by VC1 from human plasma. Twenty of 295 identified proteins were selected and associated to coagulation and complement processes and to extracellular matrix. Four of them contained a γ-carboxyl glutamic acid (Gla) domain, a calcium-binding module, and prothrombin (PT) was the most abundant. Using MicroScale thermophoresis, we quantified the interaction of PT with VC1 and sRAGE in the absence or presence of calcium that acted as a competitor. PT devoid of the Gla domain (PT des-Gla) did not bind to sRAGE, providing further evidence that the Gla domain is critical for the interaction. Finally, the presence of VC1 delayed plasma clotting in a dose-dependent manner. We propose that RAGE is involved in modulating blood coagulation presumably in conditions of lung injury.Entities:
Keywords: Gla domain; biophysics; coagulation factors; complement system; lung; lung injury; mass spectrometry (MS); molecular cell biology; pattern recognition receptor (PRR); plasma; protein γ-carboxylation; protein-protein interaction; prothrombin; receptor for advanced glycation end product (RAGE); scavenger receptor
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32665403 PMCID: PMC7458805 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.013692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157