| Literature DB >> 25681686 |
Janice Hiu-Chor Plani-Lam1, Tai-Cheong Chow1, Kam-Leung Siu1, Wing Hin Chau1, Ming-Him James Ng2, Suying Bao1, Cheung Toa Ng1, Pak Sham3, Daisy Kwok-Yan Shum1, Evan Ingley4, Dong-Yan Jin1, You-Qiang Song5.
Abstract
Although expression quantitative trait locus, eQTL, serves as an explicit indicator of gene-gene associations, challenges remain to disentangle the mechanisms by which genetic variations alter gene expression. Here we combined eQTL and molecular analyses to identify an association between two seemingly non-associated genes in brain expression data from BXD inbred mice, namely Ptpn21 and Nrg3. Using biotinylated receptor tracking and immunoprecipitation analyses, we determined that PTPN21 de-phosphorylates the upstream receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB4 leading to the up-regulation of its downstream signaling. Conversely, kinase-dead ErbB4 (K751R) or phosphatase-dead PTPN21 (C1108S) mutants impede PTPN21-dependent signaling. Furthermore, PTPN21 also induced Elk-1 activation in embryonic cortical neurons and a novel Elk-1 binding motif was identified in a region located 1919bp upstream of the NRG3 initiation codon. This enables PTPN21 to promote NRG3 expression through Elk-1, which provides a biochemical mechanism for the PTPN21-NRG3 association identified by eQTL. Biologically, PTPN21 positively influences cortical neuronal survival and, similar to Elk-1, it also enhances neuritic length. Our combined approaches show for the first time, a link between NRG3 and PTPN21 within a signaling cascade. This may explain why these two seemingly unrelated genes have previously been identified as risk genes for schizophrenia.Entities:
Keywords: ErbB4; NRG3; Neuritic elongation; PTPN21; Pro-neuronal survival
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25681686 DOI: 10.1016/j.biocel.2015.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biochem Cell Biol ISSN: 1357-2725 Impact factor: 5.085