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Endoglycan plays a role in axon guidance by modulating cell adhesion.

Thomas BaeriswylAlexandre DumoulinMartina SchaettinGeorgia TsaparaVera NiederkoflerDenise HelblingEvelyn AvilésJeannine A FreiNicole H WilsonMatthias GesemannBeat KunzEsther T Stoeckli
Published in: eLife (2021)
Axon navigation depends on the interactions between guidance molecules along the trajectory and specific receptors on the growth cone. However, our in vitro and in vivo studies on the role of Endoglycan demonstrate that in addition to specific guidance cue - receptor interactions, axon guidance depends on fine-tuning of cell-cell adhesion. Endoglycan, a sialomucin, plays a role in axon guidance in the central nervous system of chicken embryos, but it is neither an axon guidance cue nor a receptor. Rather, Endoglycan acts as a negative regulator of molecular interactions based on evidence from in vitro experiments demonstrating reduced adhesion of growth cones. In the absence of Endoglycan, commissural axons fail to properly navigate the midline of the spinal cord. Taken together, our in vivo and in vitro results support the hypothesis that Endoglycan acts as a negative regulator of cell-cell adhesion in commissural axon guidance.
Keyphrases
  • cell adhesion
  • spinal cord
  • optic nerve
  • single cell
  • spinal cord injury
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  • signaling pathway
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  • optical coherence tomography
  • single molecule