Abstract

A monoclonal antibody specific for α catenin, the 102kD cadherin-associated protein, has been characterized and used to describe the expression and distribution pattern of α catenin in adult mice and mouse embryos. This monoclonal antibody recognized an epitope in the middle part of the α catenin molecule of various vertebrate species, and bound to neither vinculin nor αN catenin, which are cytoskeletal proteins with sequence similarity to α catenin. At the early mouse embryo stage (neurulae stage) α catenin was expressed and concentrated at cell-to-cell contact sites together with various types of cadherins in all tissues. In embryos at 12.5 days of gestation, the α catenin expression was gradually diminished selectively in central nervous tissues such as brain and spinal cord, and in most of the adult central nervous tissues the α catenin expression was hardly detected. In adult non-nervous tissues most of the cells examined expressed α catenin. Especially in well-polarized tissues such as epithelial cells, α catenin appeared to be highly concentrated at cell-to-cell adherens junctions where cadherins act as adhesion molecules. This loss of α catenin expression in central nervous tissues was observed not only in mice but also in other vertebrate species such as fish and newt, suggesting that this phenomenon has important implications from the view point of nervous tissue development.

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