Elastin degradation
DEElastinabbau
Reviewed by Maurice Lichtenberg
Elastin is the extracellular matrix protein that confers recoil and elastic compliance to tissues under cyclical mechanical stress, particularly arterial walls, lungs, and skin; it is deposited almost exclusively during foetal and early postnatal development, and its half-life is estimated to exceed 70 years in humans, making post-synthetic preservation critical. With ageing, elastin fibres undergo progressive fragmentation driven by serine proteases (neutrophil elastase), cathepsins (cathepsin K, L), and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-2, MMP-9, MMP-12), accompanied by loss of the microfibrillar scaffold of fibrillin-1 required for elastin assembly and repair. Accumulated elastin-derived peptides act as bioactive fragments that engage the elastin-binding protein (EBP) receptor to promote inflammation and MMP secretion, creating a pro-degradative feedback loop implicated in pulmonary emphysema, aortic aneurysm formation, and cutaneous ageing.
