Alternative splicing of RAGE: Roles in biology and disease

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Abstract

The Receptor for Advanced Glycation End-products (RAGE) is a complex, multi-ligand signaling system implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and various cancers. RAGE undergoes extensive alternative splicing to produce a variety of transcripts with diverse functions, including soluble antagonists and variants with altered ligand binding domains. Studies focused on the major soluble variant (RAGEv1/esRAGE) have revealed this to function by binding RAGE-ligands and preventing activation of RAGE signaling in vascular and tumor cells. Furthermore, measurement of this variant in human serum has revealed that RAGEv1/esRAGE levels may represent a novel biomarker for RAGE-ligand related pathogenic states. Understanding the full plethora of RAGE alternative splicing and its regulation is central to elucidating the role of RAGE in biology and disease.

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Kalea, A. Z., Schmidt, A. M., & Hudson, B. I. (2011). Alternative splicing of RAGE: Roles in biology and disease. Frontiers in Bioscience, 16(7), 2756–2770. https://doi.org/10.2741/3884

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