Cystatin C is a disease-associated protein subject to multiple regulation.

IMMUNOLOGY AND CELL BIOLOGY(2015)

Cited 75|Views13
No score
Abstract
A protease inhibitor, cystatin C (Cst C), is a secreted cysteine protease inhibitor abundantly expressed in body fluids. Clinically, it is mostly used to measure glomerular filtration rate as a marker for kidney function due to its relatively small molecular weight and easy detection. However, recent findings suggest that Cst C is regulated at both transcriptional and post-translational levels, and Cst C production from haematopoietic cell lineages contributes significantly to the systematic pools of Cst C. Furthermore, Cst C is directly linked to many pathologic processes through various mechanisms. Thus fluctuation of Cst C levels might have serious clinical implications rather than a mere reflection of kidney functions. Here, we summarize the pathophysiological roles of Cst C dependent and independent on its inhibition of proteases, outline its change of expression by various stimuli, and elucidate the regulatory mechanisms to control this disease-related protease inhibitor. Finally, we discuss the clinical implications of these findings for translational gains.
More
Translated text
Key words
immunology, cell biology, immunity, immune response, T-Cells, B-cells, allergy, nature publishing group, nature journals, australasian society for immunology,tumour immunology
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined