| Literature DB >> 12929128 |
Masaharu Kotani1, Youichi Tajima, Taka Osanai, Atsushi Irie, Ken Iwatsuki, Masami Kanai-Azuma, Masato Imada, Hiroko Kato, Hiroshi Shitara, Hideo Kubo, Hitoshi Sakuraba.
Abstract
A membrane-surface glycoprotein, RANDAM-2, is one of the neuronal cell lineage-specific antigens involved in the neuronal differentiation of P19 embryonic carcinoma (EC) cells and the mouse central nervous system (CNS). Complementary DNA cloning of RANDAM-2 indicated that its nucleotide sequence completely matched that of PA2.26 antigen, a sialomucin-like transmembrane glycoprotein previously found on tumorigenic keratinocytes. RANDAM-2 transcripts were detectable from the embryonic stage of 6.5 days, and then the expression continued throughout the remaining embryonic stages and adulthood, with a localization restricted to the CNS. In growth factor-induced neurospheres and adult cerebrum, RANDAM-2-expressing cells coincided well not only with nestin-positive cells but also with glutamate-positive neurons, but not with gamma-aminobutyric acid-positive ones. These results indicate that RANDAM-2 is one of the type I membrane surface antigens constitutively expressed on undifferentiated neuronal cells and the glutamatergic neuronal cells during mouse neurogenesis. Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12929128 DOI: 10.1002/jnr.10696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci Res ISSN: 0360-4012 Impact factor: 4.164