A stoichiometric complex of neurexins and dystroglycan in brain
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 16 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 154 (2) , 435-446
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200105003
Abstract
In nonneuronal cells, the cell surface protein dystroglycan links the intracellular cytoskeleton (via dystrophin or utrophin) to the extracellular matrix (via laminin, agrin, or perlecan). Impairment of this linkage is instrumental in the pathogenesis of muscular dystrophies. In brain, dystroglycan and dystrophin are expressed on neurons and astrocytes, and some muscular dystrophies cause cognitive dysfunction; however, no extracellular binding partner for neuronal dystroglycan is known. Regular components of the extracellular matrix, such as laminin, agrin, and perlecan, are not abundant in brain except in the perivascular space that is contacted by astrocytes but not by neurons, suggesting that other ligands for neuronal dystroglycan must exist. We have now identified α- and β-neurexins, polymorphic neuron-specific cell surface proteins, as neuronal dystroglycan receptors. The extracellular sequences of α- and β-neurexins are largely composed of laminin-neurexin–sex hormone–binding globulin (LNS)/laminin G domains, which are also found in laminin, agrin, and perlecan, that are dystroglycan ligands. Dystroglycan binds specifically to a subset of the LNS domains of neurexins in a tight interaction that requires glycosylation of dystroglycan and is regulated by alternative splicing of neurexins. Neurexins are receptors for the excitatory neurotoxin α-latrotoxin; this toxin competes with dystroglycan for binding, suggesting overlapping binding sites on neurexins for dystroglycan and α-latrotoxin. Our data indicate that dystroglycan is a physiological ligand for neurexins and that neurexins' tightly regulated interaction could mediate cell adhesion between brain cells.Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Crystal Structure of a Laminin G–like Module Reveals the Molecular Basis of α-Dystroglycan Binding to Laminins, Perlecan, and AgrinMolecular Cell, 1999
- Dystroglycan VersatilityCell, 1999
- Challenges in Duchenne muscular dystrophyNeuromuscular Disorders, 1997
- Structures, Alternative Splicing, and Neurexin Binding of Multiple NeuroliginsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Brain extracellular matrixGlycobiology, 1996
- High Affinity Binding of α-Latrotoxin to Recombinant Neurexin IαJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1995
- Synaptic vesicle fusion complex contains unc-18 homologue bound to syntaxinNature, 1993
- Primary structure of dystrophin-associated glycoproteins linking dystrophin to the extracellular matrixNature, 1992
- The primary structure of NG2, a novel membrane-spanning proteoglycan.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- slit: an extracellular protein necessary for development of midline glia and commissural axon pathways contains both EGF and LRR domains.Genes & Development, 1990