Login / Signup

The Adaptor Protein CD2AP Is a Coordinator of Neurotrophin Signaling-Mediated Axon Arbor Plasticity.

Benjamin J HarrisonGayathri VenkatJames L LambTom H HutsonCassa DruryKristofer K RauMary Barlett BungeLorne M MendellFred H GageRichard D JohnsonCaitlin E HillEric C RouchkaLawrence David Falcon MoonJeffrey C Petruska
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Growth of noninjured axons in the adult nervous system contributes to adaptive and maladaptive plasticity, and dysfunction of this process may contribute to neurologic pathologies. Functional screening of genes regulated during growth of noninjured axons revealed CD2AP as a positive regulator of axon outgrowth. A novel association of CD2AP with TrkA and p85 suggests a distinct intracellular signaling pathway regulating growth of noninjured axons. This may also represent a novel mechanism of generating specificity in multifunctional NGF signaling. Divergent regulation of CD2AP in different axon growth conditions suggests that separate mechanisms exist for different modes of axon growth. CD2AP is the first signaling molecule associated with adult sensory axonal collateral sprouting, and this association may offer new insights for NGF/TrkA-related Alzheimer's disease mechanisms.
Keyphrases