| Literature DB >> 2776975 |
M Watanabe1, H Kobayashi, U Rutishauser, M Katar, J Alcala, H Maisel.
Abstract
The role of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM)2 in ocular lens differentiation was investigated in chicken embryos. Changes in expression of NCAM were documented by immunohistology of frozen sections. This analysis revealed that NCAM diminished during lens fiber differentiation, in contrast to the gap junction-associated protein MP26 which became more abundant. The form of NCAM expressed was determined by Western blot analysis of proteins extracted from the different regions of the Embryonic Day 6 lenses. All regions expressed NCAM with an apparent molecular weight of 140 kDa and relatively low levels of polysialylation. The function of NCAM in lens differentiation was investigated using antibodies that inhibit NCAM-mediated adhesion. Two parameters that change during maturation of the lens epithelial cells were monitored: the thickness of the tissue, indicating the length of lens cells, and the particle arrangement of gap junctions, reflecting the state of junctional differentiation. When epithelial cell explants of Embryonic Day 6 lenses were cultured for 5 days, the cells elongated and displayed an increase in the loose, random intramembranous particle arrangements characteristic of maturing lens fiber gap junctions. When the explants were cultured in the presence of anti-NCAM Fabs, the epithelia were thinner than in matched controls and had particle arrangements characteristic of a less mature state. The expression of NCAM during lens differentiation and the effects of attenuating NCAM function suggest that adhesion mediated by NCAM is an essential event in lens cell differentiation.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2776975 DOI: 10.1016/0012-1606(89)90190-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Biol ISSN: 0012-1606 Impact factor: 3.582