Collagenous repeat-containing sequence of 26 kDa protein - a newly discovered adipokine - sensu lato - A minireview.

Journal: Biomedical Papers Of The Medical Faculty Of The University Palacky, Olomouc, Czechoslovakia
Published:
Abstract

Background: Increasing evidence from numerous research studies in internal medicine shows that adipocytes and adipokines are involved in primary inflammatory processes and disease. CORS-26 (collagenous repeat- containing sequence of 26 kDa protein) is a newly discovered adipokine of the C1q/TNF molecular superfamily C1q/TNF-related protein-3 (CTRP-3) secreted, inter alia in murine monocytes and adipocytes and in human adipocytes. Reported recently as a gene product of adipocyte differentiation, it shares structural similarity with the adipocyte, adiponectin. CORS-26 is much less known than other adipocytes such as leptin and resistin. Knowledge of its various functions has clinical and therapeutic implications especially in relation to obesity and the metabolic syndrome.

Objective: This review aims to provide current knowledge of this adipokine.

Methods: Review; sources were scientific biomedical databases Medline/PubMed, BioMedCentral, Google Scholar, Ovid, ProQuest from to 1998 to 2009.

Conclusions: CORS-26 is an adipokine that regulates the secretion of other adipokines. Its effects on adipokine secretion are most probably independent of PPAR-γ. As CORS-26 up-regulates adiponectin secretion, it may be involved in metabolic and immunologic pathways. The effect of recombinant CORS-26 on insulin signaling in the presence of the metabolic syndrome needs to be investigated to further evaluate the physiological and pathophysiological role of this protein.

Authors
Marek Svestak, Lenka Sporova, Pavel Hejduk, Borek Lacnak, David Stejskal