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Frontiers in Bioscience, Frontiers in Bioscience, 1(16), p. 2756, 2011

DOI: 10.2741/3884

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Alternative splicing of RAGE: roles in biology and disease.

Journal article published in 2011 by Ann Marie Schmidt, Anastasia Z. Kalea ORCID, Barry I. Hudson
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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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.