Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates. / Whiteford, James; Ko, Sunggeon; Lee, Weontae; Couchman, John R.

In: Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 283, No. 43, 2008, p. 29322-30.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Whiteford, J, Ko, S, Lee, W & Couchman, JR 2008, 'Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates.', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 283, no. 43, pp. 29322-30. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M803505200

APA

Whiteford, J., Ko, S., Lee, W., & Couchman, J. R. (2008). Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 283(43), 29322-30. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M803505200

Vancouver

Whiteford J, Ko S, Lee W, Couchman JR. Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2008;283(43):29322-30. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M803505200

Author

Whiteford, James ; Ko, Sunggeon ; Lee, Weontae ; Couchman, John R. / Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates. In: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2008 ; Vol. 283, No. 43. pp. 29322-30.

Bibtex

@article{8b506dd0a1a611dd95e9000ea68e967b,
title = "Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates.",
abstract = "The syndecan proteoglycans are an ancient class of receptor, bearing heparan sulfate chains that interact with numerous potential ligands including growth factors, morphogens, and extracellular matrix molecules. The single syndecan of invertebrates appears not to have cell adhesion roles, but these have been described for mammalian paralogues, especially syndecan-4. This member is best understood in terms of interactions, signaling, and structure of its cytoplasmic domain. The zebrafish homologue of syndecan-4 has been genetically linked to cell adhesion and migration in zebrafish embryos, but no molecular and cellular studies have been reported. Here it is demonstrated that key functional attributes of syndecan-4 are common to both zebrafish and mammalian homologues. These include glycosaminoglycan substitution, a NXIP motif in the extracellular domain that promotes integrin-mediated cell adhesion, and a transmembrane GXXXG motif that promotes dimer formation. In addition, despite some amino acid substitutions in the cytoplasmic domain, its ability to form twisted clamp dimers is preserved, as revealed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. This technique also showed that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate can interact with the zebrafish syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain, and that the molecule in its entirety supports focal adhesion formation, and complements the murine null cells to restore a normal actin cytoskeleton identically to the rat homologue. Therefore, the cell adhesion properties of syndecan-4 are consistent across the vertebrate spectrum and reflect an early acquisition of specialization after syndecan gene duplication events at the invertebrate/early chordate boundary.",
author = "James Whiteford and Sunggeon Ko and Weontae Lee and Couchman, {John R}",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1074/jbc.M803505200",
language = "English",
volume = "283",
pages = "29322--30",
journal = "Journal of Biological Chemistry",
issn = "0021-9258",
publisher = "American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.",
number = "43",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural and cell adhesion properties of zebrafish syndecan-4 are shared with higher vertebrates.

AU - Whiteford, James

AU - Ko, Sunggeon

AU - Lee, Weontae

AU - Couchman, John R

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - The syndecan proteoglycans are an ancient class of receptor, bearing heparan sulfate chains that interact with numerous potential ligands including growth factors, morphogens, and extracellular matrix molecules. The single syndecan of invertebrates appears not to have cell adhesion roles, but these have been described for mammalian paralogues, especially syndecan-4. This member is best understood in terms of interactions, signaling, and structure of its cytoplasmic domain. The zebrafish homologue of syndecan-4 has been genetically linked to cell adhesion and migration in zebrafish embryos, but no molecular and cellular studies have been reported. Here it is demonstrated that key functional attributes of syndecan-4 are common to both zebrafish and mammalian homologues. These include glycosaminoglycan substitution, a NXIP motif in the extracellular domain that promotes integrin-mediated cell adhesion, and a transmembrane GXXXG motif that promotes dimer formation. In addition, despite some amino acid substitutions in the cytoplasmic domain, its ability to form twisted clamp dimers is preserved, as revealed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. This technique also showed that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate can interact with the zebrafish syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain, and that the molecule in its entirety supports focal adhesion formation, and complements the murine null cells to restore a normal actin cytoskeleton identically to the rat homologue. Therefore, the cell adhesion properties of syndecan-4 are consistent across the vertebrate spectrum and reflect an early acquisition of specialization after syndecan gene duplication events at the invertebrate/early chordate boundary.

AB - The syndecan proteoglycans are an ancient class of receptor, bearing heparan sulfate chains that interact with numerous potential ligands including growth factors, morphogens, and extracellular matrix molecules. The single syndecan of invertebrates appears not to have cell adhesion roles, but these have been described for mammalian paralogues, especially syndecan-4. This member is best understood in terms of interactions, signaling, and structure of its cytoplasmic domain. The zebrafish homologue of syndecan-4 has been genetically linked to cell adhesion and migration in zebrafish embryos, but no molecular and cellular studies have been reported. Here it is demonstrated that key functional attributes of syndecan-4 are common to both zebrafish and mammalian homologues. These include glycosaminoglycan substitution, a NXIP motif in the extracellular domain that promotes integrin-mediated cell adhesion, and a transmembrane GXXXG motif that promotes dimer formation. In addition, despite some amino acid substitutions in the cytoplasmic domain, its ability to form twisted clamp dimers is preserved, as revealed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. This technique also showed that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate can interact with the zebrafish syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain, and that the molecule in its entirety supports focal adhesion formation, and complements the murine null cells to restore a normal actin cytoskeleton identically to the rat homologue. Therefore, the cell adhesion properties of syndecan-4 are consistent across the vertebrate spectrum and reflect an early acquisition of specialization after syndecan gene duplication events at the invertebrate/early chordate boundary.

U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M803505200

DO - 10.1074/jbc.M803505200

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18753130

VL - 283

SP - 29322

EP - 29330

JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry

JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry

SN - 0021-9258

IS - 43

ER -

ID: 7691419