[PDF][PDF] Secreted chick semaphorins bind recombinant neuropilin with similar affinities but bind different subsets of neurons in situ

L Feiner, AM Koppel, H Kobayashi, JA Raper - Neuron, 1997 - cell.com
L Feiner, AM Koppel, H Kobayashi, JA Raper
Neuron, 1997cell.com
Collapsin-1, a member of the semaphorin family, activates receptors on specific growth
cones, thereby inhibiting their motility. Neuropilin, a previously cloned transmembrane
protein, has recently been identified as a candidate receptor for collapsin-1. We have
completed the cloning of chick collapsin-3 and-5 and show that collapsin-1,-2,-3, and-5 bind
to overlapping but distinct axon tracts. We infer that in situ, there are distinct receptors with
different affinities for collapsin-1,-2,-3, and-5. In contrast, these four collapsins all bind …
Abstract
Collapsin-1, a member of the semaphorin family, activates receptors on specific growth cones, thereby inhibiting their motility. Neuropilin, a previously cloned transmembrane protein, has recently been identified as a candidate receptor for collapsin-1. We have completed the cloning of chick collapsin-3 and -5 and show that collapsin-1, -2, -3, and -5 bind to overlapping but distinct axon tracts. We infer that in situ, there are distinct receptors with different affinities for collapsin-1, -2, -3, and -5. In contrast, these four collapsins all bind recombinant neuropilin with similar affinities. Strong binding to neuropilin is mediated by the carboxy third of the collapsins, while the semaphorin domain confers their unique binding patterns in situ. We propose that neuropilin is a common component of a semaphorin receptor complex, and that additional differentially expressed receptor components interact with the semaphorin domains to confer binding specificity.
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