Abstract

During nervous system development different cell-to-cell communication mechanisms operate in parallel guiding migrating neurons and growing axons to generate complex arrays of neural circuits. How such a system works in coordination is not well understood. Cross-regulatory interactions between different signalling pathways and redundancy between them can increase precision and fidelity of guidance systems. Immunoglobulin superfamily proteins of the NCAM and L1 families couple specific substrate recognition and cell adhesion with the activation of receptor tyrosine kinases. Thus it has been shown that L1CAM-mediated cell adhesion promotes the activation of the EGFR (erbB1) from Drosophila to humans. Here we explore the specificity of the molecular interaction between L1CAM and the erbB receptor family. We show that L1CAM binds physically erbB receptors in both heterologous systems and the mammalian developing brain. Different Ig-like domains located in the extracellular part of L1CAM can support this interaction. Interestingly, binding of L1CAM to erbB enhances its response to neuregulins. During development this may synergize with the activation of erbB receptors through L1CAM homophilic interactions, conferring diffusible neuregulins specificity for cells or axons that interact with the substrate through L1CAM.

Highlights

  • Immunoglobulin superfamily proteins are key players in the developmental mechanisms of metazoans

  • We found that L1CAM, through the Ig-like domains, physically interacts with erbB receptors in heterologous systems

  • It has been previously shown that human L1CAM-mediated homophilic cell interactions can activate the human EGFR tyrosine kynase activity in Drosophila S2 cells [3]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Immunoglobulin superfamily proteins are key players in the developmental mechanisms of metazoans. We found that L1CAM, through the Ig-like domains, physically interacts with erbB receptors in heterologous systems. Myc immunoreactivity was pulled down from cells expressing L1CAM and EGFR, suggesting that both proteins physically interact when expressed in heterologous systems.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call