Phosphatidylinositol is involved in the membrane attachment of NCAM-120, the smallest component of the neural cell adhesion molecule.

Abstract
The rodent neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) consists of three glycoproteins with Mr of 180,000, 140,000 and 120,000. The Mr 120,000 protein (NCAM‐120) has been shown to exist in membrane‐bound and soluble forms but the nature of its membrane association and release has remained obscure. We show here that phosphatidylinositol‐specific phospholipase C (PI‐PLC), but not a phospholipase C of different specificity, releases a substantial proportion of NCAM‐120 from brain membranes and solubilizes almost quantitatively NCAM‐120 present at the surface of C6 astroglial cells. The PI‐PLC effect was highly selective since only one other protein species was detectably released from C6 cells. These results suggest that NCAM‐120 is held in the membrane by covalently bound phosphatidylinositol or a closely related lipid in a way similar to several other surface proteins from eukaryotic cells. The presence of NCAM in a form which can be released from the cell surface by a highly selective mechanism raises additional possibilities for modulation and control of cell‐‐cell adhesion.