Hwa V, Oh Y, Rosenfeld R G
Department of Pediatrics, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201, USA.
Endocr Rev. 1999 Dec;20(6):761-87. doi: 10.1210/edrv.20.6.0382.
Over the last decade, the concept of an IGFBP family has been well accepted, based on structural similarities and on functional abilities to bind IGFs with high affinities. The existence of other potential IGFBPs was left open. The discovery of proteins with N-terminal domains bearing striking structural similarities to the N terminus of the IGFBPs, and with reduced, but demonstrable, affinity for IGFs, raised the question of whether these proteins were "new" IGFBPs (22, 23, 217). The N-terminal domain had been uniquely associated with the IGFBPs and has long been considered to be critical for IGF binding. No other function has been confirmed for this domain to date. Thus, the presence of this important IGFBP domain in the N terminus of other proteins must be considered significant. Although these other proteins appear capable of binding IGF, their relatively low affinity and the fact that their major biological actions are likely to not directly involve the IGF peptides suggest that they probably should not be classified within the IGFBP family as provisionally proposed (22, 23). The conservation of this single domain, so critical to high-affinity binding of IGF by the six IGFBPs, in all of the IGFBP-rPs, as well, speaks to its biological importance. Historically, and perhaps, functionally, this has led to the designation of an "IGFBP superfamily". The classification and nomenclature for the IGFBP superfamily, are, of course, arbitrary; what is ultimately relevant is the underlying biology, much of which still remains to be deciphered. The nomenclature for the IGFBP related proteins was derived from a consensus of researchers working in the IGFBP field (52). Obviously, a more general consensus on nomenclature, involving all groups working on each IGFBP-rP, has yet to be reached. Further understanding of the biological functions of each protein should help resolve the nomenclature dilemma. For the present, redesignating these proteins IGFBP-rPs simplifies the multiple names already associated with each IGFBP related protein, and reinforces the concept of a relationship with the IGFBPs. Beyond the N-terminal domain, there is a lack of structural similarity between the IGFBP-rPs and IGFBPs. The C-terminal domains do share similarities to other internal domains found in numerous other proteins. For example, the similarity of the IGFBP C terminus to the thyroglobulin type-I domain shows that the IGFBPs are also structurally related to numerous other proteins carrying the same domain (87). Interestingly, the functions of the different C-terminal domains in members of the IGFBP superfamily include interactions with the cell surface or ECM, suggesting that, even if they share little sequence similarities, the C-terminal domains may be functionally related. The evolutionary conservation of the N-terminal domain and functional studies support the notion that IGFBPs and IGFBP-rPs together form an IGFBP superfamily. A superfamily delineates between closely related (classified as a family) and distantly related proteins. The IGFBP superfamily is therefore composed of distantly related families. The modular nature of the constituents of the IGFBP superfamily, particularly their preservation of an highly conserved N-terminal domain, seems best explained by the process of exon shuffling of an ancestral gene encoding this domain. Over the course of evolution, some members evolved into high-affinity IGF binders and others into low-affinity IGF binders, thereby conferring on the IGFBP superfamily the ability to influence cell growth by both IGF-dependent and IGF-independent means (Fig. 10). A final word, from Stephen Jay Gould (218): "But classifications are not passive ordering devices in a world objectively divided into obvious categories. Taxonomies are human decisions imposed upon nature--theories about the causes of nature's order. The chronicle of historical changes in classification provides our finest insight into conceptual revolutions
在过去十年中,基于结构相似性以及以高亲和力结合胰岛素样生长因子(IGF)的功能能力,IGF结合蛋白(IGFBP)家族的概念已被广泛接受。其他潜在IGFBP的存在仍未明确。发现一些蛋白质具有与IGFBP N端结构显著相似的N端结构域,且对IGF的亲和力虽降低但仍可证实,这引发了这些蛋白质是否为“新的”IGFBP的问题(22、23、217)。N端结构域一直是IGFBP所特有的,长期以来被认为对IGF结合至关重要。迄今为止,尚未证实该结构域具有其他功能。因此,其他蛋白质N端存在这一重要的IGFBP结构域必定具有重要意义。尽管这些其他蛋白质似乎能够结合IGF,但其相对较低的亲和力以及它们的主要生物学作用可能并不直接涉及IGF肽这一事实表明,它们可能不应按照最初提议的那样被归类到IGFBP家族中(22、23)。在所有IGFBP相关蛋白(IGFBP-rP)中,这一单结构域的保守性对于六种IGFBP与IGF的高亲和力结合至关重要,这也说明了其生物学重要性。从历史角度以及可能从功能角度来看,这导致了“IGFBP超家族”这一名称的产生。当然,IGFBP超家族的分类和命名是人为设定的;最终重要的是潜在的生物学特性,而其中许多仍有待解读。IGFBP相关蛋白的命名源自IGFBP领域研究人员的共识(52)。显然,关于命名的更广泛共识,涉及所有研究每种IGFBP-rP的团队,尚未达成。对每种蛋白质生物学功能的进一步了解应有助于解决命名难题。目前,将这些蛋白质重新命名为IGFBP-rP简化了已经与每种IGFBP相关蛋白相关联的多个名称,并强化了与IGFBP存在关联的概念。除了N端结构域,IGFBP-rP与IGFBP之间缺乏结构相似性。C端结构域确实与众多其他蛋白质中发现的其他内部结构域存在相似性。例如,IGFBP的C端与甲状腺球蛋白I型结构域的相似性表明,IGFBP在结构上也与许多携带相同结构域的其他蛋白质相关(87)。有趣的是,IGFBP超家族成员中不同C端结构域的功能包括与细胞表面或细胞外基质(ECM)的相互作用,这表明,即使它们的序列相似性很小,C端结构域在功能上可能也存在关联。N端结构域的进化保守性以及功能研究支持了IGFBP和IGFBP-rP共同构成一个IGFBP超家族的观点。超家族划分了亲缘关系较近(归类为一个家族)和亲缘关系较远的蛋白质。因此,IGFBP超家族由亲缘关系较远的家族组成。IGFBP超家族成员的模块化性质,特别是它们对高度保守的N端结构域的保留,似乎最好用编码该结构域的祖先基因的外显子改组过程来解释。在进化过程中,一些成员演变成高亲和力的IGF结合蛋白,而另一些则演变成低亲和力的IGF结合蛋白,从而使IGFBP超家族能够通过依赖IGF和不依赖IGF的方式影响细胞生长(图10)。最后引用斯蒂芬·杰伊·古尔德(218)的一句话:“但分类并非是在一个客观上分为明显类别的世界中被动的排序工具。分类法是人类强加于自然的决策——关于自然秩序成因的理论。分类的历史变化记录为我们提供了对概念革命的最佳洞察。”