INTERACTIONS OF THE CHONDROITIN SULFATE PROTEOGLYCAN PHOSPHACAN, THE EXTRACELLULAR DOMAIN OF A RECEPTOR-TYPE PROTEIN-TYROSINE-PHOSPHATASE, WITH NEURONS, GLIA, AND NEURAL CELL-ADHESION MOLECULES

被引:294
作者
MILEV, P
FRIEDLANDER, DR
SAKURAI, T
KARTHIKEYAN, L
FLAD, M
MARGOLIS, RK
GRUMET, M
MARGOLIS, RU
机构
[1] NYU,MED CTR,DEPT PHARMACOL,NEW YORK,NY 10016
[2] SUNY HLTH SCI CTR,DEPT PHARMACOL,BROOKLYN,NY 11203
关键词
D O I
10.1083/jcb.127.6.1703
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Phosphacan is a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan produced by glial cells in the central nervous system, and represents the extracellular domain of a receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatase (RPTP zeta/beta). We previously demonstrated that soluble phosphacan inhibited the aggregation of microbeads coated with N-CAM or Ng-CAM, and have now found that soluble I-125-phosphacan bound reversibly to these neural cell adhesion molecules, but not to a number of other cell surface and extracellular matrix proteins. The binding was saturable, and Scatchard plots indicated a single high affinity binding site with a K-d of similar to 0.1 nM. Binding was reduced by similar to 15% after chondroitinase treatment, and free chondroitin sulfate was only moderately inhibitory, indicating that the phosphacan core glycoprotein accounts for most of the binding activity. Immunocytochemical studies of embryonic rat spinal cord and early postnatal cerebellum demonstrated that phosphacan, Ng-CAM, and N-CAM have overlapping distributions. When dissociated neurons were incubated on dishes coated with combinations of phosphacan and Ng-CAM, neuronal adhesion and neurite growth were inhibited. I-125-phosphacan bound to neurons, and the binding was inhibited by antibodies against Ng-CAM and N-CAM, suggesting that these CAMs are major receptors for phosphacan on neurons. C6 glioma cells, which express phosphacan, adhered to dishes coated with Ng-CAM, and low concentrations of phosphacan inhibited adhesion to Ng-CAM but not to laminin and fibronectin. Our studies suggest that by binding to neural cell adhesion molecules, and possibly also by competing for ligands of the transmembrane phosphatase, phosphacan may play a major role in modulating neuronal and glial adhesion, neurite growth, and signal transduction during the development of the central nervous system.
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页码:1703 / 1715
页数:13
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