Chuong C M, Edelman G M
J Neurosci. 1984 Sep;4(9):2354-68. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.04-09-02354.1984.
Several cell adhesion molecules involved in neuron-neuron and neuron-glia interactions have been identified in our laboratory and have been shown to undergo cell surface modulation. In the case of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM), it has been found that during development the molecule is converted from a microheterogeneous embryonic (E) form containing 30 gm of sialic acid/100 gm of polypeptide to several distinct adult (A) forms containing one third as much of this sugar. In vitro analyses indicate that this change is accompanied by a 4-fold increase in the rate of N-CAM homophilic binding. In the present study of the mouse and the chick, alterations of N-CAMs occurring as a result of E----A conversion, prevalence modulation, and changes in antigenic state during the development of different neural regions were analyzed by the use of highly specific polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies combined with anatomical dissection and several new quantitative assays. We made the following observations. The relative concentration of N-CAM changed during development, with the highest concentration (2.8 times the adult level) occurring around the perinatal period. Each brain region followed a similar pattern of change but according to a different time schedule. While conversion from the E to the A forms of N-CAM occurred mainly during the first 3 postnatal weeks in mice, the relative conversion rates were distinctly different in various neural tissues. The extreme examples are dorsal root ganglia, which already displayed the A forms at birth, and the diencephalon and tectal region, which still retained some E forms in the adult. A cephalocaudal maturation gradient of E----A conversion was observed in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia. Differences in the antigenic determinants of N-CAMs from different neural tissues were detected by two independent monoclonal antibodies. Finally, in some adult neural tissues, one of the three A forms was found to be dominant. These results establish that during development there are definite quantitative and qualitative differences among N-CAMs from various neural tissues. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that alterations in the relative amounts and forms of N-CAM play major roles in neural morphogenesis, possibly by altering the rates of adhesion among neurons and their processes.
我们实验室已鉴定出几种参与神经元 - 神经元和神经元 - 神经胶质细胞相互作用的细胞粘附分子,并已证明它们会发生细胞表面调节。就神经细胞粘附分子(N - CAM)而言,已发现其在发育过程中从含有30μg唾液酸/100μg多肽的微异质性胚胎(E)形式转变为几种不同的成年(A)形式,成年形式所含这种糖的量仅为胚胎形式的三分之一。体外分析表明,这种变化伴随着N - CAM同源结合速率增加4倍。在本研究中,利用高度特异性的多克隆和单克隆抗体,结合解剖学分离和几种新的定量分析方法,对小鼠和鸡在不同神经区域发育过程中因E→A转化、丰度调节和抗原状态变化而发生的N - CAM改变进行了分析。我们有以下发现。N - CAM的相对浓度在发育过程中发生变化,围产期浓度最高(为成年水平的2.8倍)。每个脑区遵循相似的变化模式,但时间安排不同。虽然小鼠出生后前3周主要发生N - CAM从E形式到A形式的转化,但不同神经组织中的相对转化率明显不同。极端的例子是背根神经节,出生时就已显示出A形式,而间脑和顶盖区域在成年时仍保留一些E形式。在脊髓和背根神经节中观察到E→A转化的头尾成熟梯度。两种独立的单克隆抗体检测到不同神经组织中N - CAM抗原决定簇的差异。最后,在一些成年神经组织中,发现三种A形式之一占主导地位。这些结果表明,在发育过程中,不同神经组织的N - CAM之间存在明确的定量和定性差异。这些数据与以下假设一致,即N - CAM相对数量和形式的改变可能通过改变神经元及其突起之间的粘附速率,在神经形态发生中起主要作用。