In
clearance, or the rate at which a substance is removed or cleared from the body, it has been found that the cellular
proteolysis of AGEs—the breakdown of proteins—produces AGE
peptides and "AGE free adducts" (AGE adducts bound to single
amino acids). These latter, after being released into the
plasma, can be excreted in the
urine. Nevertheless, the resistance of
extracellular matrix proteins to proteolysis renders their advanced glycation end products less conducive to being eliminated. AGE free adducts are the major form through which AGEs are excreted in urine, with AGE-peptides occurring to a lesser extent have been implicated in this process, although the real-life involvement of the liver has been disputed. Large AGE proteins unable to enter the
Bowman's capsule are capable of binding to receptors on endothelial and
mesangial cells and to the mesangial matrix. and decreasing kidney function in patients with unusually high AGE levels. Peptides and free adducts, the only breakdown products of AGE that are suitable for urinary excretion, are more aggressive than the AGE proteins from which they are derived, and they can perpetuate related pathology in people with diabetes, even after hyperglycemia has been brought under control. ==Research==