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1.
B G Wallace  Z Qu  R L Huganir 《Neuron》1991,6(6):869-878
Agrin causes acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) on chick myotubes in culture to aggregate, forming specializations that resemble the postsynaptic apparatus at the vertebrate skeletal neuromuscular junction. Here we report that treating chick myotubes with agrin caused an increase in phosphorylation of the AChR beta, gamma, and delta subunits. H-7, a potent inhibitor of several protein serine kinases, blocked agrin-induced phosphorylation of the gamma and delta subunits, but did not prevent either agrin-induced AChR aggregation or phosphorylation of the beta subunit. Experiments with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies demonstrated that agrin caused an increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta subunit that began within 30 min of adding agrin to the myotube cultures, reached a plateau by 3 hr, and was blocked by treatments known to block agrin-induced AChR aggregation. Anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies labeled agrin-induced specializations as they do the postsynaptic apparatus. These results suggest that agrin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta subunit may play a role in regulating AChR distribution.  相似文献   

2.
During neuromuscular synaptogenesis, neurally released agrin induces aggregation and tyrosine phosphorylation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) by acting through both the receptor tyrosine kinase MuSK (muscle-specific kinase) and the AChR-associated protein, rapsyn. To elucidate this signaling mechanism, we examined tyrosine phosphorylation of AChR-associated proteins, particularly addressing whether agrin activates Src family kinases bound to the AChR. In C2 myotubes, agrin induced tyrosine phosphorylation of these kinases, of AChR-bound MuSK, and of the AChR beta and delta subunits, as observed in phosphotyrosine immunoblotting experiments. Kinase assays revealed that the activity of AChR-associated Src kinases was increased by agrin, whereas phosphorylation of the total cellular kinase pool was unaffected. In both rapsyn-deficient myotubes and staurosporine-treated C2 myotubes, where AChRs are not clustered, agrin activated MuSK but did not cause either Src family or AChR phosphorylation. In S27 mutant myotubes, which fail to aggregate AChRs, no agrin-induced phosphorylation of AChR-bound Src kinases, MuSK, or AChRs was observed. These results demonstrate first that agrin leads to phosphorylation and activation of AChR-associated Src-related kinases, which requires rapsyn, occurs downstream of MuSK, and causes AChR phosphorylation. Second, this activation intimately correlates with AChR clustering, suggesting that these kinases may play a role in agrin-induced AChR aggregation by forming an AChR-bound signaling cascade.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,128(6):1121-1129
Agrin induces the accumulation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the myofiber membrane at synaptic sites in vertebrate skeletal muscle and causes an increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta subunit. To examine further the mechanism of agrin- induced AChR phosphorylation and the relationship between changes in protein phosphorylation and AChR aggregation, the effect of the protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor sodium pervanadate was tested on chick myotubes in culture. Pervanadate caused an increase in the phosphotyrosine content of a variety of proteins, including the AChR. Pervanadate also prevented agrin-induced AChR aggregation and slowed the rate at which AChRs were extracted from intact myotubes by mild detergent treatment. The rate at which phosphorylation of the AChR beta subunit and receptor detergent extractability changed following pervanadate-induced phosphatase inhibition was increased by agrin, indicating that agrin activates a protein tyrosine kinase rather than inhibiting a protein tyrosine phosphatase. The present results, taken together with previous findings on the inhibition of agrin-induced AChR aggregation by protein kinase inhibitors, demonstrate that protein tyrosine phosphorylation regulates the formation and stability of AChR aggregates, apparently by strengthening the interaction between AChRs and the cytoskelton.  相似文献   

4.
Agrin induces the formation of specializations on chick myotubes in culture at which several components of the postsynaptic apparatus accumulate, including acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Agrin also induces AChR phosphorylation. Several lines of evidence suggest that agrin-induced phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the beta subunit of the AChR is an early step in receptor aggregation: agrin-induced phosphorylation and aggregation have the same dose dependence; treatments that prevent aggregation block phosphorylation; phosphorylation begins before any detectable change in receptor distribution, reaches a maximum hours before aggregation is complete, and declines slowly together with the disappearance of aggregates after agrin is withdrawn; agrin slows the rate at which receptors are solubilized from intact myotubes by detergent extraction; and the change in receptor extractability parallels the change in phosphorylation. A model for agrin-induced AChR aggregation is presented in which phosphorylation of AChRs by an agrin-activated protein tyrosine kinase causes receptors to become attached to the cytoskeleton, which reduces their mobility and detergent extractability, and leads to the accumulation of receptors in the vicinity of the activated kinase, forming an aggregate.  相似文献   

5.
Clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) is a critical step in neuromuscular synaptogenesis, and is induced by agrin and laminin which are thought to act through different signaling mechanisms. We addressed whether laminin redistributes postsynaptic proteins and requires key elements of the agrin signaling pathway to cause AChR aggregation. In myotubes, laminin-1 rearranged dystroglycans and syntrophins into a laminin-like network, whereas inducing AChR-containing clusters of dystrobrevin, utrophin, and, to a marginal degree, MuSK. Laminin-1 also caused extensive coclustering of rapsyn and phosphotyrosine with AChRs, but none of these clusters were observed in rapsyn -/- myotubes. In parallel with clustering, laminin-1 induced tyrosine phosphorylation of AChR beta and delta subunits. Staurosporine and herbimycin, inhibitors of tyrosine kinases, prevented laminin-induced AChR phosphorylation and AChR and phosphotyrosine clustering, and caused rapid dispersal of clusters previously induced by laminin-1. Finally, laminin-1 caused normal aggregation of AChRs and phosphotyrosine in myotubes lacking both Src and Fyn kinases, but these clusters dispersed rapidly after laminin withdrawal. Thus, laminin-1 redistributes postsynaptic proteins and, like agrin, requires tyrosine kinases for AChR phosphorylation and clustering, and rapsyn for AChR cluster formation, whereas cluster stabilization depends on Src and Fyn. Therefore, the laminin and agrin signaling pathways overlap intracellularly, which may be important for neuromuscular synapse formation.  相似文献   

6.
At the developing neuromuscular junction, a motoneuron-derived factor called agrin signals through the muscle-specific kinase receptor to induce postsynaptic aggregation of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The agrin signaling pathway involves tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta subunit, and we have tested its role in receptor localization by expressing tagged, tyrosine-minus forms of the beta subunit in mouse Sol8 myotubes. We find that agrin-induced phosphorylation of the beta subunit occurs only on cell surface AChR, and that AChR-containing tyrosine-minus beta subunit is targeted normally to the plasma membrane. Surface AChR that is tyrosine phosphorylated is less detergent extractable than nonphosphorylated AChR, indicating that it is preferentially linked to the cytoskeleton. Consistent with this, we find that agrin treatment reduces the detergent extractability of AChR that contains tagged wild-type beta subunit but not tyrosine-minus beta subunit. In addition, agrin-induced clustering of AChR containing tyrosine-minus beta subunit is reduced in comparison to wild-type receptor. Thus, we find that agrin-induced phosphorylation of AChR beta subunit regulates cytoskeletal anchoring and contributes to the clustering of the AChR, and this is likely to play an important role in the postsynaptic localization of the receptor at the developing synapse.  相似文献   

7.
Agrin induces the formation of specializations on chick myotubes in culture at which several components of the postsynaptic apparatus accumulate, including acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Agrin also induces AChR phosphorylation. Several lines of evidence suggest that agrininduced phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the β subunit of the AChR is an early step in receptor aggregation: agrin-induced phosphorylation and aggregation have the same dose dependence; treatments that prevent aggregation block phosphorylation; phosphorylation begins before any detectable change in receptor distribution, reaches a maximum hours before aggregation is complete, and declines slowly together with the disappearance of aggregates after agrin is withdrawn; agrin slows the rate at which receptors are solubilized from intact myotubes by detergent extraction; and the change in receptor extractability parallels the change in phosphorylation. A model for agrin-induced AChR aggregation is presented in which phosphorylation of AChRs by an agrin-activated protein tyrosine kinase causes receptors to become attached to the cytoskeleton, which reduces their mobility and detergent extractability, and leads to the accumulation of receptors in the vicinity of the activated kinase, forming an aggregate. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Agrin is thought to be the nerve-derived factor that initiates acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clustering at the developing neuromuscularjunction. We have investigated the signaling pathway in mouse C2 myotubes and report that agrin induces a rapid but transient tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta subunit. As the beta-subunit tyrosine phosphorylation occurs before the formation of AChR clusters, it may serve as a precursor step in the clustering mechanism. Consistent with this, we observed that tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta subunit correlated precisely with the presence or absence of clustering under several experimental conditions. Moreover, two tyrosine kinase inhibitors, herbimycin and staurosporine, that blocked beta-subunit phosphorylation also blocked agrin-induced clustering. Surprisingly, the inhibitors also dispersed preformed AChR clusters, suggesting that the tyrosine phosphorylation of other proteins may be required for the maintenance of receptor clusters. These findings indicate that in mammalian muscle, agrin-induced AChR clustering occurs through a mechanism that requires tyrosine phosphorylation and may involve tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR itself.  相似文献   

9.
Agrin activates an intracellular signaling pathway to induce the formation of postsynaptic specializations on muscle fibers. In myotubes in culture, this pathway has been shown to include autophosphorylation of the muscle-specific kinase MuSK, activation of Src-family kinases, tyrosine phosphorylation of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) beta subunit, a decrease in receptor detergent extractability, and the accumulation of AChRs into high-density aggregates. Here we report that treating chick myotubes with lithium prevented any detectable agrin-induced change in AChR distribution without affecting the number of AChRs or the agrin-induced change in AChR tyrosine phosphorylation and detergent extractability. Lithium treatment also increased the rate at which AChR aggregates disappeared when agrin was removed. The effects of lithium developed slowly over the course of approximately 12 h. Thus, sensitivity to lithium identifies a late step in the agrin signaling pathway, after agrin-induced MuSK and AChR phosphorylation, that is necessary for the recruitment of AChRs into visible aggregates.  相似文献   

10.
C Fuhrer  J E Sugiyama  R G Taylor    Z W Hall 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(16):4951-4960
During synaptogenesis at the neuromuscular junction, a neurally released factor, agrin, causes the clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the muscle membrane beneath the nerve terminal. Agrin acts through a specific receptor which is thought to have a receptor tyrosine kinase, MuSK, as one of its components. In agrin-treated muscle cells, both MuSK and the AChR become tyrosine phosphorylated. To determine how the activation of MuSK leads to AChR clustering, we have investigated their interaction in cultured C2 myotubes. Immunoprecipitation experiments showed that MuSK is associated with the AChR and that this association is increased by agrin treatment. Agrin also caused a transient activation of the AChR-associated MuSK, as demonstrated by MuSK phosphorylation. In agrin-treated myotubes, MuSK phosphorylation increased with the same time course as phosphorylation of the beta subunit of the AChR, but declined more quickly. Although both herbimycin and staurosporine blocked agrin-induced AChR phosphorylation, only herbimycin inhibited the phosphorylation of MuSK. These results suggest that although agrin increases the amount of activated MuSK that is associated with the AChR, MuSK is not directly responsible for AChR phosphorylation but acts through other kinases.  相似文献   

11.
Agrin activation of muscle specific kinase (MuSK) initiates postsynaptic development on skeletal muscle that includes the aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs; Glass et al. [1996]: Cell 85: 513-523; Gautam et al. [1996]: Cell 85: 525-535). Although the agrin/MuSK signaling pathway remains largely unknown, changes in intracellular calcium levels are required for agrin-induced AChR aggregation (Megeath and Fallon [1998]: J Neurosci 18: 672-678). Here, we show that L-type calcium channels (L-CaChs) are required for full agrin-induced aggregation of AChRs and sufficient to induce agrin-independent AChR aggregation. Blockade of L-CaChs in muscle cultures inhibited agrin-induced AChR aggregation but not tyrosine phosphorylation of MuSK or AChR beta subunits. Activation of L-CaChs in the absence of agrin induced AChR aggregation but not tyrosine phosphorylation of MuSK or AChR beta subunits. Agrin responsiveness was significantly reduced in primary muscle cultures from the muscular dysgenesis mouse, a natural mutant, which does not express the L-CaCh. Our results establish a novel role for L-CaChs as important sources of the intracellular calcium necessary for the aggregation of AChRs.  相似文献   

12.
Rapsyn is a protein on the cytoplasmic face of the postsynaptic membrane of skeletal muscle that is essential for clustering acetylcholine receptors (AChR). Here we show that transfection of rapsyn cDNA can restore AChR clustering function to muscle cells cultured from rapsyn deficient (KORAP) mice. KORAP myotubes displayed no AChR aggregates before or after treatment with neural agrin. After transfection with rapsyn expression plasmid, some KORAP myotubes expressed rapsyn at physiological levels. These formed large AChR-rapsyn clusters in response to agrin, just like wild-type myotubes. KORAP myotubes that overexpressed rapsyn formed only scattered AChR-rapsyn microaggregates, irrespective of agrin treatment. KORAP cells were then transfected with mutant forms of rapsyn. A deletion mutant lacking residues 16–254 formed rapsyn microaggregates, but failed to aggregate AChRs. Substitution mutation to the C-terminal serine phosphorylation site of rapsyn (M43D405,D406) did not impair the response to agrin, showing that differential phosphorylation of this site is unlikely to mediate agrin-induced clustering. The results indicate that rapsyn expression is essential for agrin-induced AChR clustering but that its overexpression inhibits this pathway. The approach of using rapsyn-deficient muscle cells opens the way for defining the role of rapsyn in agrin-induced AChR clustering.  相似文献   

13.
Agrin induces both phosphorylation and aggregation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) when added to myotubes in culture, apparently by binding to a specific receptor on the myotube surface. One such agrin receptor is alpha-dystroglycan, although binding to alpha-dystroglycan appears not to mediate AChR aggregation. To determine whether agrin-induced AChR phosphorylation is mediated by alpha-dystroglycan or by a different agrin receptor, fragments of recombinant agrin that differ in affinity for alpha-dystroglycan were examined for their ability to induce AChR phosphorylation and aggregation in mouse C2 myotubes. The carboxy-terminal 95 kDa agrin fragment agrin-c95(A0B0), which binds to alpha-dystroglycan with high affinity, failed to induce AChR phosphorylation and aggregation. In contrast, agrin-c95(A4B8) which binds less strongly to alpha-dystroglycan, induced both phosphorylation and aggregation, as did a small 21 kDa fragment of agrin, agrin-c21(B8), that completely lacks the binding domain for alpha-dystroglycan. We conclude that agrin-induced AChR phosphorylation and aggregation are triggered by an agrin receptor that is distinct from alpha-dystroglycan.  相似文献   

14.
At the vertebrate neuromuscular junction (NMJ), postsynaptic aggregation of muscle acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) depends on the activation of MuSK, a muscle-specific tyrosine kinase that is stimulated by neural agrin and regulated by muscle-intrinsic tyrosine kinases and phosphatases. We recently reported that Shp2, a tyrosine phosphatase containing src homology two domains, suppressed MuSK-dependent AChR clustering in cultured myotubes, but how this effect of Shp2 is controlled has remained unclear. In this study, biochemical assays showed that agrin-treatment of C2 mouse myotubes enhanced the tyrosine phosphorylation of signal regulatory protein alpha1 (SIRPalpha1), a known activator of Shp2, and promoted SIRPalpha1's interaction with Shp2. Moreover, in situ experiments revealed that treatment of myotubes with the Shp2-selective inhibitor NSC-87877 increased spontaneous and agrin-induced AChR clustering, and that AChR clustering was also enhanced in myotubes ectopically expressing inactive (dominant-negative) Shp2; in contrast, AChR clustering was reduced in myotubes expressing constitutively active Shp2. Significantly, expression of truncated (nonShp2-binding) and full-length (Shp2-binding) forms of SIRPalpha1 in myotubes also increased and decreased AChR clustering, respectively, and coexpression of truncated SIRPalpha1 with active Shp2 and full-length SIRPalpha1 with inactive Shp2 reversed the actions of the exogenous Shp2 proteins on AChR clustering. These results suggest that SIRPalpha1 is a novel downstream target of MuSK that activates Shp2, which, in turn, suppresses AChR clustering. We propose that an inhibitory loop involving both tyrosine kinases and phosphatases sets the level of agrin/MuSK signaling and constrains it spatially to help generate high-density AChR clusters selectively at NMJs.  相似文献   

15.
Studies with environmental levels of various metals typically focus on observable neurological symptoms in newborns and adults. Use of the C2C12 skeletal muscle cell line as a developmental model enabled us to test whether environmental insults prevented myotube formation or the assembly of the postsynaptic component of the neuromuscular synapse. Specifically, we asked whether the inorganic metal mercury interfered with the fusion of myoblasts into myotubes, acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clustering, or the agrin signaling events that precede AChR clustering. C2C12 myotubes grown in culture medium containing 10 M mercuric chloride were morphologically indistinguishable from control myotubes at the light-microscopic level, and myoblasts fused into myotubes normally. However, myotubes pretreated with mercury demonstrated a decreased frequency of AChR clustering induced by agrin and other experimental manipulations. Furthermore, mercury pretreatment decreased the agrin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR subunit, thus inhibiting the agrin signal transduction pathway. In contrast, mercury failed to decrease the frequency of spontaneous AChR clustering, suggesting that spontaneous AChR clustering differs from agrin-induced AChR clustering in some significant way.This work was supported in part by Midwestern University  相似文献   

16.
Agrin induces the formation of highly localized specializations on myotubes at which nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and many other components of the postsynaptic apparatus at the vertebrate skeletal neuromuscular junction accumulate. Agrin also induces AChR tyrosine phosphorylation. Treatments that inhibit tyrosine phosphorylation prevent AChR aggregation. To examine further the relationship between tyrosine phosphorylation and receptor aggregation, we have used the technique of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching to assess the lateral mobility of AChRs and other surface proteins in mouse C2 myotubes treated with agrin or with pervanadate, a protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor. Agrin induced the formation of patches in C2 myotubes that stained intensely with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies and within which AChRs were relatively immobile. Pervanadate, on the other hand, increased protein tyrosine phosphorylation throughout the myotube and caused a reduction in the mobility of diffusely distributed AChRs, without affecting the mobility of other membrane proteins. Pervanadate, like agrin, caused an increase in AChR tyrosine phosphorylation and a decrease in the rate at which AChRs could be extracted from intact myotubes by mild detergent treatment, suggesting that immobilized receptors were phosphorylated and therefore less extractable. Indeed, phosphorylated receptors were extracted from agrin-treated myotubes more slowly than nonphosphorylated receptors. AChR aggregates at developing neuromuscular junctions in embryonic rat muscles also labeled with anti- phosphotyrosine antibodies, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation could mediate AChR aggregation in vivo as well. Thus, agrin appears to induce AChR aggregation by creating circumscribed domains of increased protein tyrosine phosphorylation within which receptors become phosphorylated and immobilized.  相似文献   

17.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid Type A (GABAA) receptors are the major sites of synaptic inhibition in the central nervous system. These receptors are thought to be pentameric complexes of homologous transmembrane glycoproteins. Molecular cloning has revealed a multiplicity of different GABAA receptor subunits divided into five classes, alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and rho, based on sequence homology. Within the proposed major intracellular domain of these subunits, there are numerous potential consensus sites for protein phosphorylation by a variety of protein kinases. We have used purified fusion proteins of the major intracellular domain of GABAA receptor subunits produced in Escherichia coli to examine the phosphorylation of these subunits by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC). The purified fusion protein of the intracellular domain of the beta 1 subunit was an excellent substrate for both PKA and PKC. PKA and PKC phosphorylated the beta 1 subunit fusion protein on serine residues on a single tryptic phosphopeptide. Site-directed mutagenesis of serine 409 in the intracellular domain of the beta 1 subunit to an alanine residue eliminated the phosphorylation of the beta 1 subunit fusion protein by both protein kinases. The purified fusion proteins of the major intracellular domain of the gamma 2S and gamma 2L subunits of the GABAA receptor were rapidly and stoichiometrically phosphorylated by PKC but not by PKA. The phosphorylation of the gamma 2S subunit occurred on serine residues on a single tryptic phosphopeptide. Site-directed mutagenesis of serine 327 of the gamma 2S subunit fusion protein to an alanine residue eliminated the phosphorylation of the gamma 2S fusion protein by PKC. The gamma 2L subunit is an alternatively spliced form of the gamma 2S subunit that differs by the insertion of 8 amino acids (LLRMFSFK) within the major intracellular domain of the gamma 2S subunit. The PKC phosphorylation of the gamma 2L subunit occurred on serine residues on two tryptic phosphopeptides. Site-specific mutagenesis of serine 343 within the 8-amino acid insert to an alanine residue eliminated the PKC phosphorylation of the novel site in the gamma 2L subunit. No phosphorylation of a purified fusion protein of the major intracellular loop of the alpha 1 subunit was observed with either PKA or PKC. These results identify the specific amino acid residues within GABAA receptor subunits that are phosphorylated by PKA and PKC and suggest that protein phosphorylation of these sites may be important in regulating GABAA receptor function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in skeletal muscle fibers is a critical event in neuromuscular synaptogenesis. AChRs in concert with other molecules form postsynaptic scaffolds in response to agrin released from motor neurons as motor neurons near skeletal muscle fibers in development. Agrin drives an intracellular signaling pathway that precedes AChR clustering and includes the tyrosine phosphorylation of AChRs. In C2C12 myotube culture, agrin application stimulates the agrin signaling pathway and AChR clustering. Previous studies have determined that the frequency of spontaneous AChR clustering is decreased and AChRs are partially inactivated when bound by the acetylcholine agonist nicotine. We hypothesized that nicotine interferes with AChR clustering and consequent postsynaptic scaffold formation. In the present study, C2C12 myoblasts were cultured with growth medium to stimulate proliferation and then differentiation medium to stimulate fusion into myotubes. They were bathed in a physiologically relevant concentration of nicotine and then subject to agrin treatment after myotube formation. Our results demonstrate that nicotine decreases agrin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of AChRs and decreases the frequency of spontaneous as well as agrin-induced AChR clustering. We conclude that nicotine interferes with postsynaptic scaffold formation by preventing the tyrosine phosphorylation of AChRs, an agrin signaling event that precedes AChR clustering.  相似文献   

19.
Agrin triggers signaling mechanisms of high temporal and spatial specificity to achieve phosphorylation, clustering, and stabilization of postsynaptic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Agrin transiently activates the kinase MuSK; MuSK activation has largely vanished when AChR clusters appear. Thus, a tyrosine kinase cascade acts downstream from MuSK, as illustrated by the agrin-evoked long-lasting activation of Src family kinases (SFKs) and their requirement for AChR cluster stabilization. We have investigated this cascade and report that pharmacological inhibition of SFKs reduces early but not later agrin-induced phosphorylation of MuSK and AChRs, while inhibition of Abl kinases reduces late phosphorylation. Interestingly, SFK inhibition applied selectively during agrin-induced AChR cluster formation caused rapid cluster dispersal later upon agrin withdrawal. We also report that a single 5-min agrin pulse, followed by extensive washing, triggered long-lasting MuSK and AChR phosphorylation and efficient AChR clustering. Following the pulse, MuSK phosphorylation increased and, beyond a certain level, caused maximal clustering. These data reveal novel temporal aspects of tyrosine kinase action in agrin signaling. First, during AChR cluster formation, SFKs initiate early phosphorylation and an AChR stabilization program that acts much later. Second, a kinase mechanism rapidly activated by agrin acts thereafter autonomously in agrin's absence to further increase MuSK phosphorylation and cluster AChRs.  相似文献   

20.
Agrin is a motoneuron-derived factor that initiates neuromuscular synapse formation; however, the signaling pathway underlying postsynaptic differentiation is not yet understood. We have investigated the role of calcium in agrin signaling through the MuSK receptor tyrosine kinase and in the intracellular signaling cascade that leads to AChR phosphorylation and clustering. We find that agrin- and neuramindase-induced MuSK activation in cultured myotubes is completely blocked by removal of extracellular calcium, but only slightly reduced by clamping of intracellular calcium transients with BAPTA. Following agrin's activation of MuSK, we find that the downstream tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta-subunit was inhibited by BAPTA but not by a slower acting chelator, EGTA. Similarly, agrin-induced clustering of the AChR was blocked by BAPTA but not EGTA. These findings indicate that extracellular calcium is required for the formation of a MuSK signaling complex, and that intracellular calcium regulates phosphorylation and clustering of the AChR in the postsynaptic membrane.  相似文献   

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