Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling is regulated by a conserved family of IGF binding proteins (IGFBPs) in vertebrates. Among the six distinct types of IGFBPs, IGFBP-5 is the most highly conserved across species and has the broadest range of biological activities. IGFBP-5 is expressed in diverse cell types, and its expression level is regulated by a variety of signaling pathways in different contexts. IGFBP-5 can exert a range of biological actions including prolonging the half-life of IGFs in the circulation, inhibition of IGF signaling by competing with the IGF-1 receptor for ligand binding, concentrating IGFs in certain cells and tissues, and potentiation of IGF signaling by delivery of IGFs to the IGF-1 receptor. IGFBP-5 also has IGF-independent activities and is even detected in the nucleus. Its broad biological activities make IGFBP-5 an excellent representative for understanding IGFBP functions. Despite its evolutionary conservation and numerous biological activities, knockout of IGFBP-5 in mice produced only a negligible phenotype. Recent research has begun to explain this paradox by demonstrating cell type-specific and physiological/pathological context-dependent roles for IGFBP-5. In this review, we survey and discuss what is currently known about IGFBP-5 in normal physiology and human disease. Based on recent in vivo genetic evidence, we suggest that IGFBP-5 is a multifunctional protein with the ability to act as a molecular switch to conditionally regulate IGF signaling.

Highlights

  • The insulin-like growth factors (IGFs), including Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 and IGF-2, are peptides that act throughout the vertebrate body via endocrine, paracrine, and autocrine signaling

  • IGF-binding proteins (IGFBPs)-5 is a multifunctional protein that is capable of regulating IGF signaling both positively and negatively in different tissues and cells

  • IGFBP-5a inhibits IGF signaling in zebrafish ionocytes under normal physiological medium, while it potentiates IGF signaling in the same cells when it is proteolytically cleaved by Papp-aa under low [Ca2+] stress [47]

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Summary

Introduction

The insulin-like growth factors (IGFs), including IGF-1 and IGF-2, are peptides that act throughout the vertebrate body via endocrine, paracrine, and autocrine signaling. IGFBP5 associated with the cell culture substratum of fibroblasts was found to potentiate the cellular growth promoting effects of IGF signaling [26]. Expressed IGFBP-5 can inhibit or enhance IGF biological activity by modulating their interaction with the IGF-I receptor (Figures 2B,C).

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