Hoffman S, Chuong C M, Edelman G M
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1984 Nov;81(21):6881-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.81.21.6881.
The neural cell adhesion molecule N-CAM is a sialic acid-rich, cell surface glycoprotein that mediates cell adhesion by a homophilic mechanism. Its binding function has been implicated in both morphogenesis and histogenesis; during development it changes in amount at the cell surface and perinatally it undergoes a decrease in sialic acid content (embryonic--adult conversion) with an increase in binding efficacy. In the present study, salient aspects of the structure and the mutual binding specificities of N-CAMs from a variety of vertebrate species were examined to determine whether (N-CAM)-mediated adhesion mechanisms have been conserved during evolution. N-CAM immunoreactivity was detected in a series of polypeptides of characteristic molecular weight extracted from brain tissues of all vertebrate species tested, including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibia, and bony and cartilaginous fish. Adhesion mediated by N-CAM occurred across species lines as indicated by the co-aggregation of chicken and mouse neural cells. By using a quantitative membrane vesicle aggregation assay, the efficacy of cross-species brain membrane vesicle adhesion in various pairings (chicken-mouse, chicken-frog, mouse-frog) was found to be similar to the efficacy of intra-species adhesion. Effective cross-species aggregation of brain membrane vesicles also occurred in embryonic-embryonic, adult-adult, and embryonic-adult pairings. In a control experiment, embryonic chicken liver membrane vesicles (which do not contain N-CAM) did not co-aggregate with embryonic chicken brain membrane vesicles. Cross-species co-aggregation could be inhibited by Fab' fragments of antibodies of N-CAM and was most effectively inhibited in the presence of mixtures made from the Fab' fragments of specific antibodies prepared against the N-CAMs from each of the animal species constituting a co-aggregating pair. These results suggest that, in accord with the proposed role of N-CAM as a regulator of morphogenesis, both the specificity of the binding region of the molecule and its basic chemical structure have been highly conserved during evolution.
神经细胞黏附分子N-CAM是一种富含唾液酸的细胞表面糖蛋白,它通过同源机制介导细胞黏附。其结合功能与形态发生和组织发生均有关;在发育过程中,它在细胞表面的量会发生变化,在围产期其唾液酸含量会降低(胚胎型向成年型转化),而结合效力会增加。在本研究中,对来自多种脊椎动物物种的N-CAM的结构和相互结合特异性的显著方面进行了研究,以确定在进化过程中(N-CAM)介导的黏附机制是否得到了保留。在从包括哺乳动物、鸟类、爬行动物、两栖动物以及硬骨鱼和软骨鱼在内的所有测试脊椎动物物种的脑组织中提取的一系列具有特征分子量的多肽中检测到了N-CAM免疫反应性。鸡和小鼠神经细胞的共聚集表明,N-CAM介导的黏附发生在不同物种之间。通过使用定量膜囊泡聚集试验,发现在各种配对(鸡-小鼠、鸡-蛙、小鼠-蛙)中跨物种脑膜囊泡黏附的效力与种内黏附的效力相似。脑膜囊泡在胚胎-胚胎、成年-成年和胚胎-成年配对中也发生了有效的跨物种聚集。在一项对照实验中,胚胎鸡肝膜囊泡(不含N-CAM)不会与胚胎鸡脑膜囊泡共聚集。跨物种共聚集可被N-CAM抗体的Fab'片段抑制,并且在由针对构成共聚集对的每种动物物种的N-CAM制备的特异性抗体的Fab'片段制成的混合物存在下,抑制最为有效。这些结果表明,与N-CAM作为形态发生调节剂的拟议作用一致,该分子结合区域的特异性及其基本化学结构在进化过程中都得到了高度保留。