| Literature DB >> 26190107 |
Xuefan Gao1, Ute Metzger2, Paolo Panza3, Prateek Mahalwar3, Sören Alsheimer3, Horst Geiger3, Hans-Martin Maischein3, Mitchell P Levesque3, Markus Templin2, Christian Söllner4.
Abstract
Floor-plate-derived extracellular signaling molecules, including canonical axon guidance cues of the Netrin family, control neuronal circuit organization. Despite the importance of the floor plate as an essential signaling center in the developing vertebrate central nervous system, no systematic approach to identify binding partners for floor-plate-expressed cell-surface and secreted proteins has been carried out. Here, we used a high-throughput assay to discover extracellular protein-protein interactions, which likely take place in the zebrafish floor-plate microenvironment. The assembled floor-plate network contains 47 interactions including the hitherto-not-reported interaction between Netrin-1 and Draxin. We further characterized this interaction, narrowed down the binding interface, and demonstrated that Draxin competes with Netrin receptors for binding to Netrin-1. Our results suggest that Draxin functions as an extracellular Netrin signaling modulator in vertebrates. A reciprocal gradient of Draxin might shape or sharpen the active Netrin gradient, thereby critically modulating its effect.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26190107 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2015.06.047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423