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1.
Bittner MA 《Biochimie》2000,82(5):447-452
Alpha-Latrotoxin and its plasma membrane receptors cause a number of distinct effects in secretory cells. First, by tethering alpha-latrotoxin to the plasma membrane, CIRL/latrophilin and neurexin 1 alpha facilitate alpha-latrotoxin-induced channel formation. The stimulation of secretion by alpha-latrotoxin in neuroendocrine cells is a consequence of Ca(2+) influx through these alpha-latrotoxin-induced channels. In addition to channel formation, alpha-latrotoxin enhances secretion in permeabilized cells through interaction with the plasma membrane receptor CIRL/latrophilin. Finally, overexpression of CIRL/latrophilin inhibits Ca(2+)-dependent secretion in permeabilized chromaffin cells in the absence of alpha-latrotoxin. This effect represents a 'constitutive' action of the G-protein coupled receptor to specifically inhibit an ATP-dependent priming step in the secretory pathway. The effect suggests that the receptor may have an important modulatory role in synaptic transmission.  相似文献   

2.
The major component of black widow spider venom, alpha-latrotoxin, triggers massive exocytosis in a variety of neurosecretory cells. An important trigger for exocytosis is the calcium influx via alpha-latrotoxin-induced channels in biological membranes. However, this mechanism fails to explain exocytosis which occurred in the complete absence of extracellular calcium. Recently, sophisticated biochemical and molecular techniques have led to the discovery of novel alpha latrotoxin-binding membrane receptors: neurexins and latrophilin/CIRL (calcium-independent receptor for alpha-latrotoxin). Neurexins are single transmembrane proteins which bind to alpha-latrotoxin in a calcium-dependent manner and also interact with the synaptic vesicle protein, synaptotagmin. On the other hand, latrophilin is a seven-transmembrane protein and belongs to the family of G-protein-coupled receptors. The multitude of effects of alpha-latrotoxin on exocytosis in different cell systems and the nature of its membrane targets are discussed in this article. The molecular details of how alpha-latrotoxin binding is transduced eventually to exocytosis remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

3.
alpha-Latrotoxin, a presynaptic toxin from black widow spider venom Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus, triggers exocytosis in a variety of neurosecretory cells both in the presence and absence of calcium in the medium. The toxin interacts with two types of membrane the receptors which belong to different families of neuronal proteins and have different structures. Calcium-dependent receptor of alpha-latrotoxin is identified as neurexin I alpha and belongs to the family of neurexins. This family is selectively expressed in nerve tissue. The calcium-independent receptor of alpha-latrotoxin belongs to the family of G-protein-coupled receptors and proteins which homologous to it are found in heart, lung, kidney and spleen tissues. As a result of alpha-latrotoxin interaction with membrane receptor in the calcium medium the toxin forms the ionic channels in plasmalemma and enhances its calcium permeability. The effects of alpha-latrotoxin on exocytosis in the calcium and calcium-free media and question concerning coupling of channel-forming and secretogenic properties of alpha-latrotoxin are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Receptor-like protein-tyrosine phosphatase sigma (PTPvarsigma) is essential for neuronal development and function. Here we report that PTPvarsigma is a target of alpha-latrotoxin, a strong stimulator of neuronal exocytosis. alpha-Latrotoxin binds to the cell adhesion-like extracellular region of PTPvarsigma. This binding results in the stimulation of exocytosis. The toxin-binding site is located in the C-terminal part of the PTPvarsigma ectodomain and includes two fibronectin type III repeats. The intracellular catalytic domains of PTPvarsigma are not required for the alpha-latrotoxin binding and secretory response triggered by the toxin in chromaffin cells. These features of PTPvarsigma resemble two other previously described alpha-latrotoxin receptors, neurexin and CIRL. Thus, alpha-latrotoxin represents an unusual example of the neurotoxin that has three independent, equally potent, and yet structurally distinct targets. The known structural and functional characteristics of PTPvarsigma, neurexin, and CIRL suggest that they define a functional family of neuronal membrane receptors with complementary or converging roles in presynaptic function via a mechanism that involves cell-to-cell and cell-to-matrix interaction.  相似文献   

5.
Pure alpha-latrotoxin is very inefficient at forming channels/pores in artificial lipid bilayers or in the plasma membrane of non-secretory cells. However, the toxin induces pores efficiently in COS-7 cells transfected with the heptahelical receptor latrophilin or the monotopic receptor neurexin. Signaling-deficient (truncated) mutants of latrophilin and latrophilin-neurexin hybrids also facilitate pore induction, which correlates with toxin binding irrespective of receptor structure. This rules out the involvement of signaling in pore formation. With any receptor, the alpha-latrotoxin pores are permeable to Ca(2+) and small molecules including fluorescein isothiocyanate and norepinephrine. Bound alpha-latrotoxin remains on the cell surface without penetrating completely into the cytosol. Higher temperatures facilitate insertion of the toxin into the plasma membrane, where it co-localizes with latrophilin (under all conditions) and with neurexin (in the presence of Ca(2+)). Interestingly, on subsequent removal of Ca(2+), alpha-latrotoxin dissociates from neurexin but remains in the membrane and continues to form pores. These receptor-independent pores are inhibited by anti-alpha-latrotoxin antibodies. Our results indicate that (i) alpha-latrotoxin is a pore-forming toxin, (ii) receptors that bind alpha-latrotoxin facilitate its insertion into the membrane, (iii) the receptors are not physically involved in the pore structure, (iv) alpha-latrotoxin pores may be independent of the receptors, and (v) pore formation does not require alpha-latrotoxin interaction with other neuronal proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Subtypes of the calcium-independent receptors for alpha-latrotoxin (CIRL1-3) define a distinct subgroup within the large family of the seven-transmembrane region cell surface receptors. The physiological function of CIRLs is unknown because neither extracellular ligands nor intracellular coupling proteins (G-proteins) have been identified. Using yeast two-hybrid screening, we identified a novel interaction between the C termini of CIRL1 and -2 and the PSD-95/discs large/ZO-1 (PDZ) domain of a recently discovered multidomain protein family (ProSAP/SSTRIP/Shank) present in human and rat brain. In vitro, CIRL1 and CIRL2 interacted strongly with the PDZ domain of ProSAP1. The specificity of this interaction has been verified by in vivo experiments using solubilized rat brain membrane fractions and ProSAP1 antibodies; only CIRL1, but not CIRL2, was co-immunoprecipitated with ProSAP1. In situ hybridization revealed that ProSAP1 and CIRL1 are co-expressed in the cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum. Colocalization was also observed at the subcellular level, as both CIRL1 and ProSAP1 are enriched in the postsynaptic density fraction from rat brain. Expression of all three CIRL isoforms is highly regulated during postnatal brain development, with CIRL3 exhibiting its highest expression levels immediately after birth, followed by CIRL2 and finally CIRL1 in aged rats.  相似文献   

7.
alpha-Latrotoxin stimulates neurotransmitter release probably by binding to two receptors, CIRL/latrophilin 1 (CL1) and neurexin Ialpha. We have now produced recombinant alpha-latrotoxin (LtxWT) that is as active as native alpha-latrotoxin in triggering synaptic release of glutamate, GABA and norepinephrine. We have also generated three alpha-latrotoxin mutants with substitutions in conserved cysteine residues, and a fourth mutant with a four-residue insertion. All four alpha-latrotoxin mutants were found to be unable to trigger release. Interestingly, the insertion mutant LtxN4C exhibited receptor-binding affinities identical to wild-type LtxWT, bound to CL1 and neurexin Ialpha as well as LtxWT, and similarly stimulated synaptic hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositolphosphates. Therefore, receptor binding by alpha-latrotoxin and stimulation of phospholipase C are insufficient to trigger exocytosis. This conclusion was confirmed in experiments with La3+ and Cd2+. La3+ blocked release triggered by LtxWT, whereas Cd2+ enhanced it. Both cations, however, had no effect on the stimulation by LtxWT of phosphatidylinositolphosphate hydrolysis. Our data show that receptor binding by alpha-latrotoxin and activation of phospholipase C do not by themselves trigger exocytosis. Thus receptors recruit alpha-latrotoxin to its point of action without activating exocytosis. Exocytosis probably requires an additional receptor-independent activity of alpha-latrotoxin that is selectively inhibited by the LtxN4C mutation and by La3+.  相似文献   

8.
Neurexins are functional alpha-latrotoxin receptors   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Sugita S  Khvochtev M  Südhof TC 《Neuron》1999,22(3):489-496
Alpha-latrotoxin is a potent neurotoxin that triggers synaptic exocytosis. Surprisingly, two distinct neuronal receptors for alpha-latrotoxin have been described: CIRL/latrophilin 1 (CL1) and neurexin-1alpha. Alpha-latrotoxin is thought to trigger exocytosis by binding to CL1, while the role of neurexin 1alpha is uncertain. Using PC12 cells, we now demonstrate that neurexins indeed function as alpha-latrotoxin receptors that are at least as potent as CL1. Both alpha- and beta-neurexins represent autonomous alpha-latrotoxin receptors that are regulated by alternative splicing. Similar to CL1, truncated neurexins without intracellular sequences are fully active; therefore, neurexins and CL1 recruit alpha-latrotoxin but are not themselves involved in exocytosis. Thus, alpha-latrotoxin is unique among neurotoxins, because it utilizes two unrelated receptors, probably to amplify recruitment of alpha-latrotoxin to active sites.  相似文献   

9.
alpha-Latrotoxin, a component of black widow spider venom, stimulates transmitter release from nerve terminals and intact chromaffin cells and enhances secretion from permeabilized chromaffin cells already maximally stimulated by Ca(2+). In this study we demonstrate that chromaffin cells contain a protein antigenically similar to the cloned Ca(2+)-independent receptor for alpha-latrotoxin. Although this receptor has homology to the secretin family of G-protein-linked receptors, pertussis toxin has no effect on the ability of alpha-latrotoxin to enhance secretion, suggesting that neither G(i) nor G(o) is involved in the response. Furthermore, in the absence of Ca(2+), alpha-latrotoxin does not stimulate polyphosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C. alpha-Latrotoxin specifically enhances ATP-dependent secretion in permeabilized cells. An in situ assay for protein kinase C reveals that alpha-latrotoxin augments the activation of protein kinase C by Ca(2+), and use of protein kinase inhibitors demonstrates that this activation is important for the toxin's enhancing effect. This enhancement of secretion requires Ca(2+) concentrations above 3 microm and is not supported by Ba(2+) or nonhydrolyzable guanine nucleotides, which do not stimulate protein kinase C. We conclude that alpha-latrotoxin stimulates secretion in permeabilized cells by regulating a Ca(2+)- and ATP-dependent event involving protein kinase C.  相似文献   

10.
The calcium-independent receptor of alpha-latrotoxin (CIRL), a neuronal cell surface receptor implicated in the regulation of exocytosis, is a natural chimera of the cell adhesion protein and the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). In contrast with canonic GPCRs, CIRL consists of two heterologous non-covalently bound subunits, p120 and p85, due to endogenous proteolytic processing of the receptor precursor in the endoplasmic reticulum. Extracellularly oriented p120 contains hydrophilic cell adhesion domains, whereas p85 resembles a generic GPCR. We determined that the site of the CIRL cleavage is located within a juxtamembrane Cys- and Trp-rich domain of the N-terminal extracellular region of CIRL. Mutations in this domain make CIRL resistant to the cleavage and impair its trafficking. Therefore, we have named it GPS for G protein-coupled receptor proteolysis site. The GPS motif is found in homologous adhesion GPCRs and thus defines a novel receptor family. We postulate that the proteolytic processing and two-subunit structure is a common characteristic feature in the family of GPS-containing adhesion GPCRs.  相似文献   

11.
The calcium-independent receptors for latrotoxin (CIRL1-CIRL3) constitute a family of seven-transmembrane receptors with an unsually large N-terminal extracellular domain which comprises several motifs usually found in cell adhesion molecules. By yeast two-hybrid screening, we have identified the intracellular C-termini of CIRL1 and CIRL2 as interaction partners of the PDZ domain of the proline-rich synapse-associated protein (ProSAP)/somatostatin receptor-interacting protein (SSTRIP) family of postsynaptic proteins (SSTRIP, ProSAP1 and ProSAP2, also known as shank1-shank3 respectively). Overlay assays indicate that the ProSAP1/shank2 PDZ domain in particular interacts strongly with the C-terminus of CIRL1 and CIRL2. Co-immunoprecipitation of ProSAP1 and CIRL1 (but not CIRL2) from rat brain extracts indicates that this interaction also occurs in vivo in rat brain. The known postsynaptic localization of ProSAP1, as well as our observation that CIRL1 (but not CIRL2) is enriched in postsynaptic density preparations from the rat brain, suggests that CIRL1 is localized pre- as well as post-synaptically in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

12.
Analysis of proteins interacting with TRIP8b adapter   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Calcium-independent receptor of latrotoxin (CIRL) is an orphan heptahelical receptor implicated in regulation of exocytosis. To characterize molecular mechanisms of CIRL functioning, we searched for its intracellular partners using the yeast two-hybrid SR system with the cytoplasmic C-terminal fragment of CIRL as bait. One of the interacting proteins was identified as TRIP8b, a putative cytosolic adapter protein with multiple tetratricopeptide repeats. To understand functional significance of CIRL-TRIP8b interaction, we further isolated TRIP8b-interacting proteins by affinity chromatography of brain extracts on immobilized recombinant TRIP8b. Sixteen proteins were identified by mass spectrometry in the purified preparations. Clathrin and subunits of AP2 complex appeared to be the major TRIP8b-interacting proteins. Our data suggest a role of TRIP8b in receptor-mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

13.
alpha-Latrotoxin, a presynaptic neurotoxin from the venom of Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus, induces massive [3H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes as a result of interaction with either Ca(2+)-dependent (neurexin 1 alpha or Ca(2+)-independent (latrophilin) membrane receptor. The main aim of the study was to elucidate whether the binding of alpha-latrotoxin to different types of receptors led to [3H]GABA secretion from one pool or in each case the source of neurotransmitter differs: in the presence of Ca2+ exocytosis is induced, while in the absence of Ca(2+)--outflow by mobile membrane GABA transporter from cytoplasm. We examined the effect of the depletion of cytosolic [3H]GABA pool by competitive inhibitors of the GABA transporter (nipecotic acid and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid) on the alpha-latrotoxin-stimulated neurotransmitter release. We also compared the influence of these agents on neurosecretion, evoked by depolarization with that evoked by alpha-latrotoxin. Depolarization was stimulated by 4-aminopyridine in the Ca(2+)-containing saline and high KCl in Ca(2+)-free medium. In synaptosomes treated with nipecotic acid unstimulated [3H]GABA release was significantly augmented and high KCl-evoked Ca(2+)-independent [3H]GABA release was essentially inhibited. But under the same conditions neurosecretion stimulated by alpha-latrotoxin greatly raised with respect to the control response. The similar results were obtained with the synaptosomes treated with 2,4-diaminobutyric acid. Another way to determine which of GABA pool is the target of alpha-latrotoxin action lay in analysis of the toxin effects on the preliminary depolarized synaptosomes. alpha-Latrotoxin influence was diminished by the preceding depolarization by 4-aminopyridine in Ca2+ presence. But after the high KCl stimulation effect of alpha-latrotoxin didn't change. These data suggest that alpha-latrotoxin triggers neurotransmitter release from synaptic vesicles via exocytosis. We suppose that the type of membrane receptor does not determine the mechanism of GABA release evoked by the toxin.  相似文献   

14.
alpha-Latrotoxin triggers massive neurotransmitter release from nerve terminals by binding to at least two distinct presynaptic receptors, neurexin 1 alpha and CIRL1/latrophilin1 (CL1). We have now generated knockout (KO) mice that lack CL1 and analyzed them alone or in combination with neurexin 1 alpha KO mice. Mice lacking only CL1, or both CL1 and neurexin 1 alpha, were viable and fertile. Ca(2+)-independent binding of alpha-latrotoxin to brain membranes was impaired similarly in CL1 single and in CL1/neurexin 1 alpha double KO mice (approximately 75% decrease) but not in neurexin 1 alpha single KO mice. In contrast, Ca(2+)-dependent binding (approximately 2 times above Ca(2+)-independent binding) was altered in both CL1 (approximately 50% decrease) and neurexin 1 alpha single KO mice (approximately 25% decrease) and was decreased further in double KO mice (approximately 75% decrease). Synaptosomes lacking CL1 exhibited the same decrease in alpha-latrotoxin-stimulated glutamate release in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) (approximately 75%). In contrast, synaptosomes lacking neurexin 1 alpha exhibited only a small decrease in alpha-latrotoxin-triggered release in the absence of Ca(2+) (approximately 20%) but a major decrease in the presence of Ca(2+) (approximately 75%). Surprisingly, synaptosomes lacking both CL1 and neurexin 1 alpha displayed a relatively smaller decrease in alpha-latrotoxin-stimulated glutamate release than synaptosomes lacking only CL1 in the absence of Ca(2+) (approximately 50 versus approximately 75%), but the same decrease in the presence of Ca(2+) (approximately 75%). Our data suggest the following two major conclusions. 1) CL1 and neurexin 1 alpha together account for the majority (75%) of alpha-latrotoxin receptors in brain, with the remaining receptor activity possibly due to other CL and neurexin isoforms, and 2) the two receptors act additively in binding alpha-latrotoxin but not in triggering release. Together these data suggest that the two receptors act autonomously in binding of alpha-latrotoxin but cooperatively in transducing the stimulation of neurotransmitter release by alpha-latrotoxin.  相似文献   

15.
alpha-latrotoxin (LTX) stimulates massive release of neurotransmitters by binding to a heptahelical transmembrane protein, latrophilin. Our experiments demonstrate that latrophilin is a G-protein-coupled receptor that specifically associates with heterotrimeric G proteins. The latrophilin-G protein complex is very stable in the presence of GDP but dissociates when incubated with GTP, suggesting a functional interaction. As revealed by immunostaining, latrophilin interacts with G alpha q/11 and G alpha o but not with G alpha s, G alpha i or G alpha z, indicating that this receptor may couple to several G proteins but it is not promiscuous. The mechanisms underlying LTX-evoked norepinephrine secretion from rat brain nerve terminals were also studied. In the presence of extracellular Ca2+, LTX triggers vesicular exocytosis because botulinum neurotoxins E, Cl or tetanus toxin inhibit the Ca(2+)-dependent component of the toxin-evoked release. Based on (i) the known involvement of G alpha q in the regulation of inositol-1,4,5-triphosphate generation and (ii) the requirement for Ca2+ in LTX action, we tested the effect of inhibitors of Ca2+ mobilization on the toxin-evoked norepinephrine release. It was found that aminosteroid U73122, which inhibits the coupling of G proteins to phospholipase C, blocks the Ca(2+)-dependent toxin's action. Thapsigargin, which depletes intracellular Ca2+ stores, also potently decreases the effect of LTX in the presence of extracellular Ca2+. On the other hand, clostridial neurotoxins or drugs interfering with Ca2+ metabolism do not inhibit the Ca2(+)-independent component of LTX-stimulated release. In the absence of Ca2+, the toxin induces in the presynaptic membrane non-selective pores permeable to small fluorescent dyes; these pores may allow efflux of neurotransmitters from the cytoplasm. Our results suggest that LTX stimulates norepinephrine exocytosis only in the presence of external Ca2+ provided intracellular Ca2+ stores are unperturbed and that latrophilin, G proteins and phospholipase C may mediate the mobilization of stored Ca2+, which then triggers secretion.  相似文献   

16.
Holz GG  Leech CA  Habener JF 《Biochimie》2000,82(9-10):915-926
Cholera toxin, pertussis toxin, mastoparan, maitotoxin, and alpha-latrotoxin are complex protein or polyether-based toxins of bacterial, insect, or phytoplankton origin that act with high potency at the endocrine pancreas to stimulate secretion of insulin from beta-cells located in the islets of Langerhans. The remarkable insulinotropic properties of these toxins have attracted considerable attention by virtue of their use as selective molecular probes for analyses of beta-cell stimulus-secretion coupling. Targets of the toxins include heptahelical cell surface receptors, GTP-binding proteins, ion channels, Ca(2+) stores, and the exocytotic secretory apparatus. Here we review the value of insulinotropic toxins from the perspective of their established use in the study of signal transduction pathways activated by the blood glucose-lowering hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Our analysis of one insulinotropic toxin (alpha-latrotoxin) leads us to conclude that there exists a process of molecular mimicry whereby the 'lock and key'analogy inherent to hormone-receptor interactions is reproduced by a toxin related in structure to GLP-1.  相似文献   

17.
Calcium-independent receptor of α-latrotoxin (CIRL-1) is an adhesion G protein-coupled receptor implicated in the regulation of exocytosis. CIRL-1 biosynthesis involves constitutive proteolytic processing that takes place in the endoplasmic reticulum, requires the receptor's GPS domain, and yields heterologous two-subunit receptor complexes. It was proposed that the GPS-directed cleavage is based on cis-autoproteolysis. In this study, we demonstrate that activators of protein kinase C - PMA and ionomycin, can inhibit the cleavage of CIRL-1 precursor in transfected cells. Both reagents also downregulate trafficking of CIRL-1 to the cell surface that results in accumulation of the uncleaved receptor precursor inside the cells. Experiments with a non-cleavable soluble mutant of CIRL-1 showed that the downregulation of the receptor trafficking is independent of its cleavage. Our data suggest that the GPS proteolysis of CIRL-1 is not a purely autocatalytic process and may involve auxiliary proteins or factors that become available in the course of CIRL-1 trafficking.  相似文献   

18.
Pescatori M  Grasso A 《Biochimie》2000,82(9-10):909-914
alpha-Latrotoxin, a protein toxin present in the venom of black widow spider, interacts with membrane receptors of neurons and other secretory cells to stimulate exocytosis. Two types of receptors have been identified and cloned. Our attention has been focused on the calcium independent receptor, a G-protein coupled receptor, named latrophilin to see whether alpha-latrotoxin interaction was capable to produce an ionotropic effect, in alternative to the metabotropic hypothesis. Expression of latrophilin receptor is sufficient for the alpha-latrotoxin effect to become manifest. By inducing the transient expression of latrophilin receptor in non-neuronal human embryonic cells, we made them susceptible to toxin action as demonstrated by the increase in 45Ca(2+) accumulation detected after toxin treatment. Since the presence of a monoclonal antibody against alpha-latrotoxin (4C4.1 mAb) was able to obliterate toxin-dependent effects, we further investigated the nature of toxin-antibody interaction by characterization of the binding epitope using phage display-peptide libraries. A conformational epitope was recognized and partially localized on a region of the peptide toxin whereby a tetrameric structure is formed and inserted into the membrane of target cells where it functions as a pore.  相似文献   

19.
In recent years, a role for AMPA receptors as modulators of presynaptic functions has emerged. We have investigated the presence of AMPA receptor subunits and the possible dynamic control of their surface exposure at the presynaptic membrane. We demonstrate that the AMPA receptor subunits GluR1 and GluR2 are expressed and organized in functional receptors in axonal growth cones of hippocampal neurons. AMPA receptors are actively internalized upon activation and recruited to the surface upon depolarization. Pretreatment of cultures with botulinum toxin E or tetanus toxin prevents the receptor insertion into the plasma membrane, whereas treatment with alpha-latrotoxin enhances the surface exposure of GluR2, both in growth cones of cultured neurons and in brain synaptosomes. Purification of small synaptic vesicles through controlled-pore glass chromatography, revealed that both GluR2 and GluR1, but not the GluR2 interacting protein GRIP, copurify with synaptic vesicles. These data indicate that, at steady state, a major pool of AMPA receptor subunits reside in synaptic vesicle membranes and can be recruited to the presynaptic membrane as functional receptors in response to depolarization.  相似文献   

20.
The G-protein-coupled receptor CIRL1/latrophilin-1 (CL1) and the type-1 membrane proteins neurexins represent distinct neuronal cell adhesion molecules that exhibit no similarities except for one common function: both proteins are receptors for α-latrotoxin, a component of black widow spider venom that induces massive neurotransmitter release at synapses. Unexpectedly, we have now identified a direct binding interaction between the extracellular domains of CL1 and neurexins that is regulated by alternative splicing of neurexins at splice site 4 (SS4). Using saturation binding assays, we showed that neurexins lacking an insert at SS4 bind to CL1 with nanomolar affinity, whereas neurexins containing an insert at SS4 are unable to bind. CL1 competed for neurexin binding with neuroligin-1, a well characterized neurexin ligand. The extracellular sequences of CL1 contain five domains (lectin, olfactomedin-like, serine/threonine-rich, hormone-binding, and G-protein-coupled receptor autoproteolysis-inducing (GAIN) domains). Of these domains, the olfactomedin-like domain mediates neurexin binding as shown by deletion mapping. Cell adhesion assays using cells expressing neurexins and CL1 revealed that their interaction produces a stable intercellular adhesion complex, indicating that their interaction can be trans-cellular. Thus, our data suggest that CL1 constitutes a novel ligand for neurexins that may be localized postsynaptically based on its well characterized interaction with intracellular SH3 and multiple ankyrin repeats adaptor proteins (SHANK) and could form a trans-synaptic complex with presynaptic neurexins.  相似文献   

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