Ankyrin-binding proteins related to nervous system cell adhesion molecules: candidates to provide transmembrane and intercellular connections in adult brain.
Open Access
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 121 (1) , 121-133
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.121.1.121
Abstract
A major class of ankyrin-binding glycoproteins have been identified in adult rat brain of 186, 155, and 140 kD that are alternatively spliced products of the same pre-mRNA. Characterization of cDNAs demonstrated that ankyrin-binding glycoproteins (ABGPs) share 72% amino acid sequence identity with chicken neurofascin, a membrane-spanning neural cell adhesion molecule in the Ig super-family expressed in embryonic brain. ABGP polypeptides have the following features consistent with a role as ankyrin-binding proteins in vitro and in vivo: (a) ABGPs and ankyrin associate as pure proteins in a 1:1 molar stoichiometry; (b) the ankyrin-binding site is located in the COOH-terminal 21 kD of ABGP186 which contains the predicted cytoplasmic domain; (c) ABGP186 is expressed at approximately the same levels as ankyrin (15 pmoles/milligram of membrane protein); and (d) ABGP polypeptides are co-expressed with the adult form of ankyrinB late in postnatal development and are colocalized with ankyrinB by immunofluorescence. Similarity in amino acid sequence and conservation of sites of alternative splicing indicate that genes encoding ABGPs and neurofascin share a common ancestor. However, the major differences in developmental expression reported for neurofascin in embryos versus the late postnatal expression of ABGPs suggest that ABGPs and neurofascin represent products of gene duplication events that have subsequently evolved in parallel with distinct roles. The predicted cytoplasmic domains of rat ABGPs and chicken neurofascin are nearly identical to each other and closely related to a group of nervous system cell adhesion molecules with variable extracellular domains, which includes L1, Nr-CAM, and Ng-CAM of vertebrates, and neuroglian of Drosophila. The ankyrin-binding site of rat ABGPs is localized to the C-terminal 200 residues which encompass the cytoplasmic domain, suggesting the hypothesis that ability to associate with ankyrin may be a shared feature of neurofascin and related nervous system cell adhesion molecules.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bravo/Nr-CAM is closely related to the cell adhesion molecules L1 and Ng-CAM and has a similar heterodimer structure.The Journal of cell biology, 1992
- Primary structure of dystrophin-associated glycoproteins linking dystrophin to the extracellular matrixNature, 1992
- A new 440-kD isoform is the major ankyrin in neonatal rat brain.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Neurite outgrowth on immobilized axonin-1 is mediated by a heterophilic interaction with L1(G4).The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Molecular cloning of cDNA encoding the rat neural cell adhesion molecule L1 Two L1 isoforms in the cytoplasmic region are produced by differential splicingFEBS Letters, 1991
- Isolation and characterization of cDNAs encoding human brain ankyrins reveal a family of alternatively spliced genes.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Structure of the chicken neuron-glia cell adhesion molecule, Ng-CAM: origin of the polypeptides and relation to the Ig superfamily.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Neurofascin: A novel chick cell-surface glycoprotein involved in neurite-neurite interactionsCell, 1987
- Visualization of neural cell adhesion molecule by electron microscopy.The Journal of cell biology, 1987
- The human LDL receptor: A cysteine-rich protein with multiple Alu sequences in its mRNACell, 1984