Chitin, chitinases, and chitin lectins: Emerging roles in human pathophysiology

Publication date: Available online 6 March 2018Source: PathophysiologyAuthor(s): Sally Ziatabar, Jennifer Zepf, Sushama Rich, Ben T. Danielson, Paul I. Bollyky, Robert SternAbstractChitin is a simple β-linked repeating sugar polymer prominent in the building block structures of a wide variety of organisms, from the yeast cell wall to the exoskeleton and shells of arthropods and other forms of invertebrate life. It had previously been assumed that vertebrates did not contain chitins. However, chitin and chitinases are now documented to occur in vertebrate tissues. Chitin, chitinases and particularly chitinase-like proteins are involved in important human pathologies, though the mechanisms by which these function is unknown. These chitinase-like proteins bind to chitin and function as chitin lectins in that they bind to chitin but have lost the ability to degrade it. Emphasis is placed on one of the chitinase-like proteins, CHI3L1, that has acquired wide clinical importance. The purpose of this review is to place an array of bewildering observations associated with various human disorders into a framework, particularly the pathologies of the human gastro-intestinal tract. A reasonably cohesive story may eventually emerge.
Source: Pathophysiology - Category: Pathology Source Type: research
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