S100G, formerly
calbindin 3 and
calbindin-D9k, is present in mammalian
enterocytes (epithelial cells of the intestine). S100G can also be found in the kidney and
uterus in some mammalian species. It is encoded in humans by the
S100G gene which has also been termed
CALB3. Nonetheless, there is no
homology between calbindin 1 and S100G, apart from their calcium binding domains (
EF-hands): S100G has two EF-hands, and calbindin 1 has six. Unlike calbindin 1 and 2, S100G is a member of the
S100 family of
calcium-binding proteins. S100G mediates the transport of calcium across the enterocytes from the apical side, where entry is regulated by the
calcium channel TRPV6, to the basolateral side, where
calcium pumps such as
PMCA1 utilize intracellular
adenosine triphosphate to pump calcium into the blood. The transport of calcium across the enterocyte cytoplasm appears to be rate-limiting for calcium absorption in the intestine; the presence of calbindin increases the amount of calcium crossing the cell without raising the free concentration. S100G may also stimulate the basolateral calcium-pumping
ATPases.
Expression of S100G, like that of calbindin 1, is stimulated by the active vitamin D
metabolite,
calcitriol although the precise mechanisms are still controversial. In mice in which the
vitamin D receptor is not expressed, S100G is less abundant, but not absent. == Discovery ==