Nejvíce citovaný článek - PubMed ID 33291486
Characterization of AMBN I and II Isoforms and Study of Their Ca2+-Binding Properties
Ameloblastin is a protein in biomineralization of tooth enamel. However recent results indicate that this is probably not its only role in an organism. Enamel matrix formation represents a complex process enabled via specific crosslinking of two proteins - the most abundant amelogenin and the ameloblastin (AMBN). The human AMBN (hAMBN) gene possesses 13 protein coding exons with alternatively spliced transcripts and the longest isoform about 447 amino acid residues. It has been described that AMBN molecules in vitro assemble into oligomers via a sequence encoded by exon 5. Enamel is formed by the processing of enamel proteins by two specific proteases - enamelysin (MMP-20) and kallikrein 4 (KLK-4). The scaffold made of AMEL and non-amelogenin proteins is cleaved and removed from the developed tooth enamel. The hAMBN is expressed in two isoforms (ISO I and II), which could lead to their different utilization determined by distinct proteolytic profiles. In this study, we compared proteolytic profiles of both isoforms of hAMBN expressed in E. coli after proteolysis by MMP-20, KLK-4, and their 1:2 mixture. Proteolysis products were analysed and cleavage sites were identified by mass spectrometry. The proteolytic profiles of two AMBN isoforms showed different results, although we have to determine that the analysed AMBN was not post-translationally modified as expressed in prokaryotic cells. These results may lead to the suggestion of potentially divergent roles of AMBN isoforms cleavage products in various cell signalling pathways such as calcium buffering or signalling cascades.
- Klíčová slova
- Ameloblastin, Enzymatic cleavage products, KLK-4, MMP-20, Proteolytic analysis,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Highly specialized enamel matrix proteins (EMPs) are predominantly expressed in odontogenic tissues and diverged from common ancestral gene. They are crucial for the maturation of enamel and its extreme complexity in multiple independent lineages. However, divergence of EMPs occured already before the true enamel evolved and their conservancy in toothless species suggests that non-canonical functions are still under natural selection. To elucidate this hypothesis, we carried out an unbiased, comprehensive phenotyping and employed data from the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium to show functional pleiotropy of amelogenin, ameloblastin, amelotin, and enamelin, genes, i.e. in sensory function, skeletal morphology, cardiovascular function, metabolism, immune system screen, behavior, reproduction, and respiratory function. Mice in all KO mutant lines, i.e. amelogenin KO, ameloblastin KO, amelotin KO, and enamelin KO, as well as mice from the lineage with monomeric form of ameloblastin were affected in multiple physiological systems. Evolutionary conserved motifs and functional pleiotropy support the hypothesis of role of EMPs as general physiological regulators. These findings illustrate how their non-canonical function can still effect the fitness of modern species by an example of influence of amelogenin and ameloblastin on the bone physiology.
- MeSH
- amelogenin metabolismus MeSH
- myši MeSH
- proteiny zubní skloviny * genetika MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- myši MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- amelogenin MeSH
- enamel matrix proteins MeSH Prohlížeč
- proteiny zubní skloviny * MeSH