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1.
Bispecific monoclonal antibodies (BsMAbs) prepared by somatic cell fusion bind monovalently to their targets and yet are extremely potent enhancers of target cell lysis by relevant effector cells. The mechanisms underlying this efficiency are not known. To investigate this property, we studied the ability of selected antibodies to modulate potentiation of tumor lysis by a bispecific antibody (CL158) which targets Fc gamma RIII-expressing cells, via the 3G8 epitope, to malignant cells expressing CA19-9 antigen. Antibodies directed against the 3G8 and B73.1 epitopes of Fc gamma RIII efficiently inhibited BsMAb-mediated SW948 tumor cell lysis by interleukin-2 (IL-2)-activated lymphocytes (PBLs). Unexpectedly, Leu 19 antibody reversed antibody-dependent but not antibody-independent lysis of 51Cr-labeled SW948 cells by IL-2-activated PBLs in a concentration-dependent fashion. Leu 19 binds to CD56, a neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) isoform expressed by large granular lymphocytes (LGLs). The effects of Leu 19 on bispecific antibody promotion of lysis were due to competition for binding to the 3G8 epitope of Fc gamma RIII and led to inhibition of binding between LGLs and SW948 cells. Leu 19 did not inhibit antibody-dependent lysis by the monospecific, bivalent IgG2a variant of CA19-9 antibody. These studies show that competition assays can be useful in dissecting the relevant mechanisms underlying BsMAb-promoted lysis. Steric constraints between effector cell trigger molecules (i.e., Fc gamma RIII) and CAM such as N-CAM may regulate the function of these molecules. Understanding the roles of diverse CAM in this phenomenon will facilitate efforts to expand and use defined effector cell populations with maximal lytic potential and to identify potentially responsive tumor phenotypes.  相似文献   

2.
A large number of glycoproteins in the central nervous system are attached to the cell membrane via covalent linkage to glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). Many of them, including the drosophila fasciclin 1 as well as the mammalian glycoproteins Thy-1, TAG1, N-CAM and F11,F3, contactin are members of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily. These and other GPI-linked molecules have been implicated in key developmental events including selective axonal fasciculation and highly specific growth to and innervation of target tissues. In model systems fasciclin 1, TAG1 and N-CAM have been shown to be capable of mediating cell-cell adhesion via a homophilic binding mechanism confirming their operational classification as cell adhesion molecules (CAMs). However, of these molecules, only N-CAM has been shown to mediate a complex response (neurite outgrowth) via a homophilic binding mechanism. Whether the other molecules in this family mediate biological responses by binding to themselves and/or other molecules remains to be determined. Studies on N-CAM provide an ideal model system for understanding the function of GPI anchors since alternative splicing of the NCAM gene generates both lipid-linked and transmembrane N-CAM isoforms. Recent studies have shown that neurons can recognise and respond (by increased neurite outgrowth) to both lipid-linked and transmembrane N-CAM isoforms expressed on the surface of non-neuronal cells following transfection with appropriate cDNAs. The major determinant of neuronal responsiveness was the level of N-CAM expression rather than the isoform type. Neurite outgrowth in response to transfected N-CAM is mediated by transmembrane N-CAM isoforms expressed by neurons and this involves the activation of classical second messenger pathways in the neurons. One possibility is that GPI anchors are utilised when a cell has simply to provide recognition or positional information to a second cell whereas transmembrane molecules might be required for cells that actively respond to such information. The hypothesis is compatible with all the known information on N-CAM expression and function and may be extended to other adhesive events.  相似文献   

3.
Cell-adhesion molecules are thought to play crucial roles in development and plasticity in the nervous system. Four neural cell adhesion molecules CD9, CD24, L1 and N-CAM are associated in the surface membrane of cultured neuroblastoma cells as studied by chemical cross-linking with bifunctional reagent 3,3'-dithiobis (sulphosuccinimidyl-propionate) followed by a subsequent immunodetection using antibodies directed against the above molecules. We obtained direct evidence of CD9 and L1, but not CD9 and N-CAM clasterisation, also interactions of CD24 with L1, CD24 with N-CAM and some others. These observations illustrate topography of neural cell adhesion molecules located in the vicinity to each other and imply the basis for their functional cooperativity.  相似文献   

4.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM/CD56) is a member of the Ig supergene family that has been shown to mediate homophilic binding. Several isoforms of N-CAM have been identified that are expressed preferentially in different tissues and stages of embryonic development. To examine the primary structure of N-CAM expressed in leukocytes, N-CAM cDNA were generated by polymerase chain reaction from RNA isolated from normal human NK cells and the KG1a hematopoietic leukemia cell line. The sequence of leukocyte-derived N-CAM cDNA was essentially identical with N-CAM cDNA from human neuroblastoma cells that encode the 140-kDa isoform of N-CAM. Inasmuch as N-CAM is preferentially expressed on human NK cells and a subset of T lymphocytes that mediate MHC-unrestricted cell-mediated cytotoxicity, we examined the potential role of N-CAM in cell-mediated cytotoxicity and heterotypic lymphocyte-tumor cell adhesion. N-CAM loss mutants were established from the human N-CAM+ KG1a leukemia cell line, and N-CAM cDNA was transfected into a human colon carcinoma cell line and murine L cells. Using this panel of mutants and transfectants, it was determined that expression of N-CAM on these target cells does not affect susceptibility to resting or IL-2-activated NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Moreover, expression of N-CAM in these transfectants failed to induce homotypic or heterotypic cellular adhesion. Collectively, these studies indicate that homophilic N-CAM interactions probably do not mediate a major role in the cytolytic interaction between NK cells and N-CAM+ tumor cell targets.  相似文献   

5.
Plasmacytomas are localized neoplastic proliferations of monoclonal plasma cells. When multifocal, the process is referred to as multiple myeloma. These lesions exhibit a pattern of antigen expression and cytomorphology that usually leads to a ready diagnosis. However, potentially troublesome variations in immunophenotype occur. We describe a case of a plasmacytoma from a patient who presented with sudden onset of pain and a lytic lesion of the left proximal humerus. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections showed a lymphoproliferative lesion composed of large lymphoid cells, some with plasmacytoid and immunoblastic features. The lesion also showed significant mitotic activity. Immunohistochemical staining was positive for CD45 (LCA), CD56 (N-CAM), CD43 (MT1), and cytokeratin CAM5.2. There was also clonal staining for lambda light chains. In addition, flow cytometric analysis showed positivity for myeloid markers such as CD13, CD33, CD38, and CD138. Significant negative markers include CD20 (L26), CD45RO (UCHL-1), and CD79alpha. The unusual phenotypic features of this plasmacytoma illustrate potential diagnostic pitfalls. It is important to fully study such lesions to correctly classify them, because this has significant impact on prognosis and management.  相似文献   

6.
Culture of human monocyte-depleted peripheral blood mononuclear cells with recombinant IL2 (rIL2) induced adherence to plastic by 24 hr and subsequent proliferation in a subpopulation of lymphocytes with phenotypic and functional characteristics of activated natural killer (NK) cells. Purified human NK cells activated in the presence of IL2 for 24 hr upregulated the expression of the CD11c (p150.95) and CD11a antigen but not other cellular adhesion molecules (CAM). After further incubation with IL2, NK cells displayed upregulation of all of the antigens in the CD11/CD18 family of CAM. The process of adhesion was strictly dependent on culture in the presence of IL2, divalent cations, and active cellular metabolism. Adhesion also was dependent on expression of CAM on the cell surface, since monoclonal antibodies to CAM inhibited adhesion of activated NK cells to varying degrees (from 50 to 80%). An antibody (LeuM5) to the CD11c antigen (p150.95) gave the highest level of inhibition, and anti-CD11a (LFA-1) also was inhibitory, while anti-CD56 (NKH1) or anti-CD11b did not interfere with adhesion to plastic. Anti-CD11c was also the most effective in initiating the detachment of adherent-phase NK cells. Antibodies to CD18 or CD2 antigen also inhibited binding of NK cells to plastic. The blocking effects of anti-CD2 and anti-CD11a were additive in this system. On the surface of plastic-adherent and motile NK cells, all CAM except the CD56 antigen had a polar or bipolar distribution, as determined by staining with anti-CAM antibodies. Surface antigens CD11b, CD11c, CD2, and CD18 on nonadherent NK cells were clustered at the cellular poles by both immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy, whereas CD11a (LFA-1) and CD56 antigens were distributed diffusely. CAM, especially CD11c, were also detected in cytoplasmic granules by immunostaining in IL2-activated NK cells. Thus, CAM may be stored in granules, allowing for their rapid transfer to the cell membrane in response to activation. Our results indicate that CAM are upregulated in IL2-activated NK cells and that some of these molecules (e.g., CD11c) play an important role in the development of plastic adherence by a subpopulation of these cells.  相似文献   

7.
Studies of chicken embryos have demonstrated that cell adhesion molecules are important in embryonic induction and are expressed in defined sequences during embryogenesis and histogenesis. To extend these observations and to provide comparable evidence for heterochronic changes in such sequences during evolution, the local distributions of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) and of the liver cell adhesion molecule (L-CAM) were examined in Xenopus laevis embryos by immunohistochemical and biochemical techniques. Because of the technical difficulties presented by the existence of multiple polypeptide forms of CAMs and by autofluorescence of yolk-containing cells, special care was taken in choosing and characterizing antibodies, fluorophores, and embedding procedures. Both N-CAM and L-CAM were found at low levels in pregastrulation embryos. During gastrulation, N-CAM levels increased in the presumptive neural epithelium and decreased in the endoderm, but L-CAM continued to be expressed in all cells including endodermal cells. During neurulation, the level of N-CAM expression in the neural ectoderm increased considerably, while remaining constant in non-neural ectoderm and diminishing in the somites; in the notochord, N-CAM was expressed transiently. Prevalence modulation was also seen at all sites of secondary induction: both CAMs increased in the sensory layer of the ectoderm during condensation of the placodes. During organogenesis, the expression of L-CAM gradually diminished in the nervous system while N-CAM expression remained high. In all other organs examined, the amount of one or the other CAM decreased, so that by stage 50 these two molecules were expressed in non-overlapping territories. Embryonic and adult tissues were compared to search for concordance of CAM expression at later stages. With few exceptions, the tissue distributions of N-CAM and L-CAM were similar in the frog and in the chicken from early times of development. In contrast to previous observations in the chicken and in the mouse, N-CAM expression was found to be high in the adult liver of Xenopus, whereas L-CAM expression was low. In the adult brain, N-CAM was expressed as three components of apparent molecular mass 180, 140, and 120 kD, respectively; in earlier stages of development only the 140-kD component could be detected. In the liver, a single N-CAM band appears at 160 kD, raising the possibility that this band represents an unusual N-CAM polypeptide. L-CAM appeared at all stages as a 124-kD molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
In previous studies we have reported that polysialic acid is an oncodevelopmental antigen in human kidney but its relationship to the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) remained undefined. In the present study, we showed by the combination of immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting that renal polysialic acid is a structural component of N-CAM polypeptide and that two highly sialylated N-CAM isoforms of approximately 120 kDa and 140 kDa existed in Wilms tumor. The presence of a cell surface coat composed of polysialic acid and N-CAM was revealed by immunoelectron microscopy, and morphological evidence for its involvement in modulating cell-cell adhesion has been provided. Furthermore, highly sialylated N-CAM was detectable extracellularly. N-CAM immunolabeling was present in compartments from the nuclear envelope to the plasma membrane. However, polysialic acid was only detectable at the cell surface suggesting that in Wilms tumor cells sialyl polymer synthesis may occur partially or exclusively at this site.  相似文献   

9.
The potential relationship of cell adhesion to embryonic induction during feather formation was examined by immunohistochemical analysis of the spatiotemporal distribution of three cell-adhesion molecules (CAMs), neural CAM (N-CAM), liver CAM (L-CAM), and neuron-glia CAM (Ng-CAM), and of substrate molecules (laminin and fibronectin) in embryonic chicken skin. The N-CAM found at sites of embryonic induction in the feather was found to be similar to brain N-CAM as judged by immuno-cross-reactivity, migratory position in PAGE, and the presence of embryonic to adult conversion. In contrast to the N-CAM found in the brain, however, only one polypeptide of Mr 140,000 was seen. N-CAM-positive dermal condensations were distributed periodically under L-CAM-positive feather placodes at those sites where basement membranes are known to be disrupted. After initiation of induction, L-CAM-positive placode cells became transiently N-CAM-positive. N-CAM was asymmetrically concentrated in the dorsal region of the feather bud, while fibronectin was concentrated in the ventral region. During feather follicle formation, N-CAM was expressed in the dermal papilla and was closely apposed to the L-CAM-positive papillar ectoderm, while the dermal papilla showed no evidence of laminin or fibronectin. The collar epithelium was both N-CAM- and L-CAM-positive. During the formation of the feather filament, N-CAM appeared periodically and asymmetrically on basilar cells located in the valleys between adjacent barb ridges. In contrast to the two primary CAMs, Ng-CAM was found only on nerves supplying the feather and the skin. These studies indicate that at each site of induction during feather morphogenesis, a general pattern is repeated in which an epithelial structure linked by L-CAM is confronted with periodically propagating condensations of cells linked by N-CAM.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The developmental appearance of cell-adhesion molecules (CAMs) was mapped during the morphogenesis of the adult chicken feather. Neural CAM (N-CAM), liver CAM (L-CAM), and neuron-glia CAM (Ng-CAM), as well as substrate molecules (laminin and fibronectin), were compared in newborn chicken skin by immunohistochemical means. N-CAM was found to be enriched in the dermal papilla, which was closely apposed to L-CAM-positive papillar ectoderm. The two CAMs were then co-expressed in cells of the collar epithelium. Subsequently generated barb epithelia expressed only L-CAM, but N-CAM reappeared periodically on cells between developing barbs and barbules. N-CAM first appeared on a single L-CAM-positive basilar cell located in each valley flanked by two adjacent barb ridges. Subsequently, the expression of N-CAM extended one cell after another to include the whole basilar layer. N-CAM also appeared in the L-CAM-positive axial-plate epithelia, beginning in a single cell located at the ridge base. The two collectives of N-CAM-positive epithelia constituting the marginal and axial plates then disintegrated, leaving interdigitating spaces between keratinized structures that had previously expressed L-CAM. The morphological transformation from an epithelial cylinder to a three-level branched feather pattern is thus achieved by coupling alternating CAM expression in linked cell collectives with specific differentiation events, such as keratinization. During all of these morphogenetic processes, laminin and fibronectin formed a continuous basement membrane separating pulp from feather epithelia, and were excluded from the sites involved in periodic appearances of N-CAM. The same staining pattern described for developing chickens persisted in the feather follicles of adult chicken tissue that have gone through several cycles of molting. Cyclic expression of the two different CAMs underlies each of the different morphological events that are generated epigenetically during feather morphogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Levels of the neural cell adhesion molecule N-CAM in muscle are regulated in parallel with the susceptibility of muscle to innervation: N-CAM is abundant on the surface of early embryonic myotubes, declines in level as development proceeds, reappears when adult muscles are denervated or paralyzed, and is lost after reinnervation (Covault, J., and J. R. Sanes, 1985, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82:4544-4548). Here we used immunocytochemical methods to compare this pattern of expression with those of several other molecules known to be involved in cellular adhesion. Laminin, fibronectin, and a basal lamina-associated heparan sulfate proteoglycan accumulate on embryonic myotubes after synapse formation, and their levels change little after denervation. L1, J1, nerve growth factor-inducible large external protein, uvomorulin, and a carbohydrate epitope (L2/HNK-1) shared by several adhesion molecules are undetectable on the surface of embryonic, perinatal, adult, or denervated adult muscle fibers. Thus, of the molecules tested, only N-CAM appears on the surface of muscle cells in parallel with the ability of the muscle cell surface to accept synapses. However, four antigens--N-CAM, J1, fibronectin, and a heparan sulfate proteoglycan--accumulate in interstitial spaces near denervated synaptic sites; regenerating axons traverse these spaces as they preferentially reinnervate original synaptic sites. Of particular interest is J1, antibodies to which block adhesion of central neurons to astrocytes (Kruse, J., G. Keihauer, A. Faissner, R. Timpl, and M. Schachner, 1985, Nature (Lond.), 316:146-148). J1 is associated with collagen and other fibrils in muscle and thus may be an extracellular matrix molecule employed in both the central and peripheral nervous systems.  相似文献   

13.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1921-1929
The rodent neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) consists of three glycoprotein chains of 180, 140, and 120 kD in their adult forms. Although the proportions of the three components are known to change during development and differ between brain regions, their individual distribution and function are unknown. Here we report studies carried out with a monoclonal antibody that specifically recognizes the 180-kD component of mouse N-CAM (N-CAM180) in its highly sialylated embryonic and less glycosylated adult forms. In primary cerebellar cell cultures, N-CAM180 antibody reacts intracellularly with all types of neural cells including astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and neurons. During cerebellar, telencephalic, and retinal development N-CAM180 is detectable by indirect immunohistology in differentiated neural cells, but, in contrast to total N-CAM, not in their proliferating precursors in the ventricular zone and primordial and early postnatal external granular layer. In monolayer cultures of C1300 neuroblastoma cells, N-CAM180 appears by immunofluorescence more concentrated at contact points between adjacent cells, while N-CAM comprising the 180- and 140-kD component shows a more uniform distribution at the plasma membrane. Treatment of neuroblastoma cells with dimethylsulfoxide, which promotes differentiation, induces a shift toward the predominant expression of N- CAM180. These observations support the notion that N-CAM180 is expressed selectively in more differentiated neural cells and suggest a differential role of N-CAM180 in the stabilization of cell contacts.  相似文献   

14.
The involvement of the adhesion molecules L1, N-CAM, and J1 in adhesion and neurite outgrowth in the peripheral nervous system was investigated. We prepared Schwann cells and fibroblasts (from sciatic nerves) and neurons (from dorsal root ganglia) from 1-d mice. These cells were allowed to interact with each other in a short-term adhesion assay. We also measured outgrowth of dorsal root ganglion neurons on Schwann cell and fibroblast monolayers. Schwann cells (which express L1, N-CAM, and J1) adhered most strongly to dorsal root ganglion neurons by an L1-dependent mechanism and less by N-CAM and J1. Schwann cell-Schwann cell adhesion was mediated by L1 and N-CAM, but not J1. Adhesion of fibroblasts (which express N-CAM, but not L1 or J1) to neurons or Schwann cells was mediated by L1 and N-CAM and not J1. However, inhibition by L1 and N-CAM antibodies was found to be less pronounced with fibroblasts than with Schwann cells. N-CAM was also strongly involved in fibroblast-fibroblast adhesion. Neurite outgrowth was most extensive on Schwann cells and less on fibroblasts. A difference in extent of neurite elongation was seen between small- (10-20 microns) and large- (20-35 microns) diameter neurons, with the larger neurons tending to exhibit longer neurites. Fab fragments of polyclonal L1, N-CAM, and J1 antibodies exerted slightly different inhibitory effects on neurite outgrowth, depending on whether the neurites were derived from small or large neurons. L1 antibodies interfered most strikingly with neurite outgrowth on Schwann cells (inhibition of 88% for small and 76% for large neurons), while no inhibition was detectable on fibroblasts. Similarly, although to a smaller extent than L1, N-CAM appeared to be involved in neurite outgrowth on Schwann cells and not on fibroblasts. Antibodies to J1 only showed a very small effect on neurite outgrowth of large neurons on Schwann cells. These observations show for the first time that identified adhesion molecules are potent mediators of glia-dependent neurite formation and attribute to L1 a predominant role in neurite outgrowth on Schwann cells which may be instrumental in regeneration.  相似文献   

15.
Individual neurons can express both the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) and the neuron-glia cell adhesion molecule (Ng-CAM) at their cell surfaces. To determine how the functions of the two molecules may be differentially controlled, we have used specific antibodies to each cell adhesion molecule (CAM) to perturb its function, first in brain membrane vesicle aggregation and then in tissue culture assays testing the fasciculation of neurite outgrowths from cultured dorsal root ganglia, the migration of granule cells in cerebellar explants, and the formation of histological layers in the developing retina. Our strategy was initially to delineate further the binding mechanisms for each CAM. Antibodies to Ng-CAM and N-CAM each inhibited brain membrane vesicle aggregation but the binding mechanisms of the two CAMs differed. As expected from the known homophilic binding mechanism of N-CAM, anti-N- CAM-coated vesicles did not co-aggregate with uncoated vesicles. Anti- Ng-CAM-coated vesicles readily co-aggregated with uncoated vesicles in accord with a postulated heterophilic binding mechanism. It was also shown that N-CAM was not a ligand for Ng-CAM. In contrast to assays with brain membrane vesicles, cellular systems can reveal functional differences for each CAM reflecting its relative amount (prevalence modulation) and location (polarity modulation). Consistent with this, each of the three cellular processes examined in vitro was preferentially inhibited only by anti-N-CAM or by anti-Ng-CAM antibodies. Both neurite fasciculation and the migration of cerebellar granule cells were preferentially inhibited by anti-Ng-CAM antibodies. Anti-N-CAM antibodies inhibited the formation of histological layers in the retina. The data on perturbation by antibodies were correlated with the relative levels of expression of Ng-CAM and N-CAM in each of these different neural regions. Quantitative immunoblotting experiments indicated that the relative Ng-CAM/N-CAM ratios in comparable extracts of brain, dorsal root ganglia, and retina were respectively 0.32, 0.81, and 0.04. During culture of dorsal root ganglia in the presence of nerve growth factor, the Ng-CAM/N-CAM ratio rose to 4.95 in neurite outgrowths and 1.99 in the ganglion proper, reflecting both polarity and prevalence modulation. These results suggest that the relative ability of anti-Ng-CAM and anti-N-CAM antibodies to inhibit cell-cell interactions in different neural tissues is strongly correlated with the local Ng-CAM/N-CAM ratio.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
We evaluated the effect of the antibodies to adhesion molecules CD2, CD11a/CD18 (LFA-1), and CD56 (N-CAM) on MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity mediated by polyclonal NK cells and LAK cells or by CD3+ or CD3- cytolytic cell clones against a panel of tumor cell targets selected according to expression or absence of the corresponding ligands. We show that (i) antibodies to CD11a/CD18 and, to a lesser extent, antibodies to CD2 inhibit target cell lysis, whereas anti-CD56 antibodies exert little if any effect; (ii) in a model system using polyclonal NK/LAK cells as effectors and K562 or HL60-R (NK-resistant) cells as targets, inhibition of cytotoxicity occurs without a significant impairment of effector to target cell binding; (iii) the cytotoxic function of CD3+ or CD3- cytotoxic cell clones is inhibited differentially by antibodies to adhesion molecules; (iv) conjugates formed in the presence of antibodies which inhibit target cell lysis display a significant reduction of target to effector cell contact surface; and (v) this may lead to defective activation of effector cells, as indicated by lack of redistribution of the microtubular apparatus. We conclude that (i) MHC-unrestricted cytotoxicity is regulated by a number of molecular interactions that span far beyond our present knowledge and that it is strictly dependent on the surface phenotype of the effector cell and of the target cell; (ii) in certain types of effector/target cell interactions, antibodies to adhesion molecules do not prevent conjugate formation but reduce the extent of cell-to-cell surface contact which, in turn, leads to defective activation of the effector cell and, therefore, to inhibition of target cell lysis.  相似文献   

17.
L1CAM     
The L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM) plays a major role in the development of the nervous system and in the malignancy of human tumors. In terms of biological function, L1CAM comes along in two different flavors: (1) a static function as a cell adhesion molecule that acts as a glue between cells; (2) a motility promoting function that drives cell migration during neural development and supports metastasis of human cancers. Important factors that contribute to the switch in the functional mode of L1CAM are: (1) the cleavage from the cell surface by membrane proximal proteolysis and (2) the ability to change binding partners and engage in L1CAM-integrin binding. Recent studies have shown that the cleavage of L1CAM by metalloproteinases and the binding of L1CAM to integrins via its RGD-motif in the sixth Ig-domain activate signaling pathways distinct from the ones elicited by homophilic binding. Here we highlight important features of L1CAM proteolysis and the signaling of L1CAM via integrin engagement. The novel insights into L1CAM downstream signaling and its regulation during tumor progression and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) will lead to a better understanding of the dualistic role of L1CAM as a cell adhesion and/or motility promoting cell surface molecule.  相似文献   

18.
The L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM) plays a major role in the development of the nervous system and in the malignancy of human tumors. In terms of biological function, L1CAM comes along in two different flavors: (1) a static function as a cell adhesion molecule that acts as a glue between cells; (2) a motility promoting function that drives cell migration during neural development and supports metastasis of human cancers. Important factors that contribute to the switch in the functional mode of L1CAM are: (1) the cleavage from the cell surface by membrane proximal proteolysis and (2) the ability to change binding partners and engage in L1CAM-integrin binding. Recent studies have shown that the cleavage of L1CAM by metalloproteinases and the binding of L1CAM to integrins via its RGD-motif in the sixth Ig-domain activate signaling pathways distinct from the ones elicited by homophilic binding. Here we highlight important features of L1CAM proteolysis and the signaling of L1CAM via integrin engagement. The novel insights into L1CAM downstream signaling and its regulation during tumor progression and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) will lead to a better understanding of the dualistic role of L1CAM as a cell adhesion and/or motility promoting cell surface molecule.  相似文献   

19.
The liver of Xenopus laevis is a unique exception in terms of the cell adhesion molecules (CAM) which it expresses. In most species, hepatocytes are characterized by the expression of the epithelial Ca(2+)-dependent CAM E-cadherin or of closely related variants of this molecule (e.g., L-CAM); in Xenopus liver, however, the levels of expression of epithelial cadherins is very low while a thyroxine-inducible isoform of N-CAM is expressed in postmetamorphic hepatocytes. Since Xenopus liver N-CAM is localized in regions of contact between hepatocytes, it has been proposed that it might be involved in mediating hepatocyte adhesion in this species. In this study, we demonstrate that N-CAM can indeed act as a functional adhesion molecule in the liver of Xenopus and that its expression is correlated with a number of profound morphological changes of this organ. After thyroxine treatment, hepatocytes are no longer organized in long loose cords but in compact lobules of cells. Furthermore, at the ultrastructural level, plasma membranes are in much closer proximity with the appearance of electron-dense material in areas of closer contact. We have established two novel culture systems for premetamorphic Xenopus hepatocytes as adherent and non-adherent cells, and we describe the induction of expression of N-CAM in these cells. Given the difference in the profile of adhesion molecules present in the liver of Xenopus and of other species, our results are discussed in view of the importance of the expression of a specific set of cell adhesion molecules in defining the development of homologous organs in different species.  相似文献   

20.
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