International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2023)

The S100B Protein: A Multifaceted Pathogenic Factor More Than a Biomarker

  • Fabrizio Michetti,
  • Maria Elisabetta Clementi,
  • Rosa Di Liddo,
  • Federica Valeriani,
  • Francesco Ria,
  • Mario Rende,
  • Gabriele Di Sante,
  • Vincenzo Romano Spica

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24119605
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 11
p. 9605

Abstract

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S100B is a calcium-binding protein mainly concentrated in astrocytes in the nervous system. Its levels in biological fluids are recognized as a reliable biomarker of active neural distress, and more recently, mounting evidence points to S100B as a Damage-Associated Molecular Pattern molecule, which, at high concentration, triggers tissue reactions to damage. S100B levels and/or distribution in the nervous tissue of patients and/or experimental models of different neural disorders, for which the protein is used as a biomarker, are directly related to the progress of the disease. In addition, in experimental models of diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, traumatic and vascular acute neural injury, epilepsy, and inflammatory bowel disease, alteration of S100B levels correlates with the occurrence of clinical and/or toxic parameters. In general, overexpression/administration of S100B worsens the clinical presentation, whereas deletion/inactivation of the protein contributes to the amelioration of the symptoms. Thus, the S100B protein may be proposed as a common pathogenic factor in different disorders, sharing different symptoms and etiologies but appearing to share some common pathogenic processes reasonably attributable to neuroinflammation.

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