Litcius/Paper detail

Research on the biological mechanism and potential application of CEMIP

Yang Liu, Gang Hu, Yuetong Li, Xinyi Kong, Kaming Yang, Zhenlin Li, Wanwen Lao, Jiaxin Li, Jianhua Zhong, Shitong Zhang, Yuxin Leng, Changlong Bi, Aixia Zhai

2023Frontiers in Immunology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell migration-inducing protein (CEMIP), also known as KIAA1199 and hyaluronan-binding protein involved in hyaluronan depolymerization, is a new member of the hyaluronidase family that degrades hyaluronic acid (HA) and remodels the extracellular matrix. In recent years, some studies have reported that CEMIP can promote the proliferation, invasion, and adhesion of various tumor cells and can play an important role in bacterial infection and arthritis. This review focuses on the pathological mechanism of CEMIP in a variety of diseases and expounds the function of CEMIP from the aspects of inhibiting cell apoptosis, promoting HA degradation, inducing inflammatory responses and related phosphorylation, adjusting cellular microenvironment, and regulating tissue fibrosis. The diagnosis and treatment strategies targeting CEMIP are also summarized. The various functions of CEMIP show its great potential application value.

Topics & Concepts

Extracellular matrixHyaluronic acidCell biologyMechanism (biology)HyaluronidaseFibronectinCell adhesionFunction (biology)ChemistryCellCancer researchBiologyBiochemistryEnzymeAnatomyPhilosophyEpistemologyProteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans researchFibroblast Growth Factor ResearchGlycosylation and Glycoproteins Research