Faculty Research 1990 - 1999

Vertebrate homologues of C. elegans UNC-5 are candidate netrin receptors.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1997

Keywords

Animal, Axons: ph, Caenorhabditis-elegans, Cell-Movement: ph, Gene-Expression, Helminth-Proteins, Human, Membrane-Proteins, Molecular-Sequence-Data, Nerve-Growth-Factors: me, Neurons: cy, Protein-Conformation, Rats, Receptors-Cell-Surface: ge, ph, Receptors-Growth-Factor, Receptors-Nerve-Growth-Factor: ge, ph, RNA-Messenger: me, Sequence-Homology-Amino-Acid, Spinal-Cord: em, me, SUPPORT-NON-U-S-GOVT, SUPPORT-U-S-GOVT-P-H-S, Transfection

First Page

833

Last Page

838

JAX Source

Nature 1997 Apr 24;386(6627):833-8

Abstract

In the developing nervous system, migrating cells and axons are guided to their targets by cues in the extracellular environment. The netrins are a family of phylogenetically conserved guidance cues that can function as diffusible attractants and repellents for different classes of cells and axons. In vertebrates, insects and nematodes, members of the DCC subfamily of the immunoglobulin superfamily have been implicated as receptors that are involved in migration towards netrin sources. The mechanisms that direct migration away from netrin sources (presumed repulsions) are less well understood. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the transmembrane protein UNC-5 (ref. 14) has been implicated in these responses, as loss of unc-5 function causes migration defects and ectopic expression of unc-5 in some neurons can redirect their axons away from a netrin source. Whether UNC-5 is a netrin receptor or simply an accessory to such a receptor has not, however, been defined. We now report the identification of two vertebrate homologues of UNC-5 which, with UNC-5 and the product of the mouse rostral cerebellar malformation gene (rcm), define a new subfamily of the immunoglobulin superfamily, and whose messenger RNAs show prominent expression in various classes of differentiating neurons. We provide evidence that these two UNC-5 homologues, as well as the rcm gene product, are netrin-binding proteins, supporting the hypothesis that UNC-5 and its relatives are netrin receptors.

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