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Regulation of bone-renal mineral and energy metabolism: the PHEX, FGF23, DMP1, MEPE ASARM pathway.
- Source :
-
Critical reviews in eukaryotic gene expression [Crit Rev Eukaryot Gene Expr] 2012; Vol. 22 (1), pp. 61-86. - Publication Year :
- 2012
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Abstract
- More than 300 million years ago, vertebrates emerged from the vast oceans to conquer gravity and the dry land. With this transition, new adaptations occurred that included ingenious changes in reproduction, waste secretion, and bone physiology. One new innovation, the egg shell, contained an ancestral protein (ovocleidin-116) that likely first appeared with the dinosaurs and was preserved through the theropod lineage in modern birds and reptiles. Ovocleidin-116 is an avian homolog of matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein (MEPE) and belongs to a group of proteins called short integrin-binding ligand-interacting glycoproteins (SIBLINGs). These proteins are all localized to a defined region on chromosome 5q in mice and chromosome 4q in humans. A unifying feature of SIBLING proteins is an acidic serine aspartate-rich MEPE-associated motif (ASARM). Recent research has shown that the ASARM motif and the released ASARM peptide have regulatory roles in mineralization (bone and teeth), phosphate regulation, vascularization, soft-tissue calcification, osteoclastogenesis, mechanotransduction, and fat energy metabolism. The MEPE ASARM motif and peptide are physiological substrates for PHEX, a zinc metalloendopeptidase. Defects in PHEX are responsible for X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets (HYP). There is evidence that PHEX interacts with another ASARM motif containing SIBLING protein, dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP1). DMP1 mutations cause bone and renal defects that are identical with the defects caused by a loss of PHEX function. This results in autosomal recessive hypophosphatemic rickets (ARHR). In both HYP and ARHR, increased FGF23 expression plays a major role in the disease and in autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets (ADHR), FGF23 half-life is increased by activating mutations. ASARM peptide administration in vitro and in vivo also induces increased FGF23 expression. FGF23 is a member of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family of cytokines, which surfaced 500 million years ago with the boney fish (i.e., teleosts) that do not contain SIBLING proteins. In terrestrial vertebrates, FGF23, like SIBLING proteins, is expressed in the osteocyte. The boney fish, however, are an-osteocytic, so a physiological bone-renal link with FGF23 and the SIBLINGs was cemented when life ventured from the oceans to the land during the Triassic period, approximately 300 million years ago. This link has been revealed by recent research that indicates a competitive displacement of a PHEX-DMP1 interaction by an ASARM peptide that leads to increased FGF23 expression. This review discusses the new discoveries that reveal a novel PHEX, DMP1, MEPE, ASARM peptide, and FGF23 bone-renal pathway. This pathway impacts not only bone formation, bone-renal mineralization, and renal phosphate homeostasis but also energy metabolism. The study of this new pathway is relevant for developing therapies for several diseases: bone-teeth mineral loss disorders, renal osteodystrophy, chronic kidney disease and bone mineralization disorders (CKD-MBD), end-stage renal diseases, ectopic arterial-calcification, cardiovascular disease renal calcification, diabetes, and obesity.
- Subjects :
- Animals
Bone Demineralization, Pathologic metabolism
Bone Demineralization, Pathologic therapy
Bone Diseases, Metabolic therapy
Calcification, Physiologic physiology
Chronic Kidney Disease-Mineral and Bone Disorder metabolism
Chronic Kidney Disease-Mineral and Bone Disorder therapy
Diabetes Mellitus metabolism
Diabetes Mellitus therapy
Egg Proteins metabolism
Female
Fibroblast Growth Factor-23
Humans
Hypophosphatemia metabolism
Hypophosphatemia therapy
Kidney Failure, Chronic metabolism
Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy
Male
Mechanotransduction, Cellular physiology
Mice
Mice, Transgenic
Obesity metabolism
Obesity therapy
Osteocytes metabolism
Osteomalacia metabolism
Osteomalacia therapy
Rickets metabolism
Rickets therapy
Bone Diseases, Metabolic metabolism
Bone and Bones metabolism
Energy Metabolism physiology
Extracellular Matrix Proteins metabolism
Fibroblast Growth Factors metabolism
Glycoproteins metabolism
Kidney metabolism
PHEX Phosphate Regulating Neutral Endopeptidase metabolism
Phosphoproteins metabolism
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1045-4403
- Volume :
- 22
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Critical reviews in eukaryotic gene expression
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 22339660
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1615/critreveukargeneexpr.v22.i1.50