 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2000, 20(15):5696-5702
Clinical Mutations in the L1 Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule Affect
Cell-Surface Expression
Hugh D.
Moulding,
Robert L.
Martuza, and
Samuel D.
Rabkin
Interdisciplinary Program for Neuroscience and Department of
Neurosurgery, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC
20007
 |
ABSTRACT |
Mutations in the L1 neural cell adhesion molecule, a transmembrane
glycoprotein, cause a spectrum of congenital neurological syndromes,
ranging from hydrocephalus to mental retardation. Many of these
mutations are single amino acid changes that are distributed throughout
the various domains of the protein. Defective herpes simplex virus
vectors were used to express L1 protein with the clinical missense
mutations R184Q and D598N in the Ig2 and Ig6 extracellular domains,
respectively, and S1194L in the cytoplasmic domain. All three mutant
proteins were expressed at similar levels in infected cells. Neurite
outgrowth of cerebellar granule cells was stimulated on astrocytes
expressing wild-type or S1194L L1, whereas those expressing R184Q and
D598N L1 failed to increase neurite length. Live cell immunofluorescent
staining of L1 demonstrated that most defective vector-infected cells
did not express R184Q or D598N L1 on their cell surface. This greatly
diminished cell-surface expression occurred in astrocytes, neurons, and
non-neural cells. In contrast to wild-type or S1194L L1, the R184Q and
D598N L1 proteins had altered apparent molecular weights and remained
completely endoglycosidase H (endoH)-sensitive, suggesting incomplete
post-translational processing. We propose that some missense mutations
in human L1 impede correct protein trafficking, with functional
consequences independent of protein activity. This provides a rationale
for how expressed, full-length proteins with single amino acid changes could cause clinical phenotypes similar in severity to knock-out mutants.
Key words:
gene transfer; herpes simplex virus; protein trafficking; membrane glycoproteins; mental retardation; neurite outgrowth
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Mutations in the gene for L1
(L1CAM) are linked to a number of human CNS
syndromes, including X-linked hydrocephalus (XLH or HSAS), MASA
syndrome (mental retardation, aphasia, shuffling gait, and
adducted thumbs with dysgenesis of the corticospinal tract), and
X-linked complicated spastic paraparesis (Jouet et al., 1994 ;
Vits et al., 1994 ). L1CAM knock-out mice exhibit a range of
similar defects that vary depending on genetic background (Dahme et
al., 1997 ; Cohen et al., 1998 ; Fransen et al., 1998a ; Demyanenko et
al., 1999 ). Missense mutations encoding single amino acid substitutions
are the most common type among the 93 clinical mutations in human L1
(http://dnalab-www.uia.ac.be/dnalab/l1/) (Van Camp et al., 1996 ;
Yamasaki et al., 1997 ). This broad spectrum of pathological mutations
with associated clinical phenotypes provides a basis to study
structure-function relationships. Some laboratories have investigated
the functional consequences of clinical mutations (Zhao and Siu, 1996 ;
Zhao et al., 1998 ; De Angelis et al., 1999 ), but none have examined the
fate of full-length L1 mutant proteins expressed in cells of the
nervous system.
L1 is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily (Moos et al., 1988 ),
containing six immunoglobulin-like (Ig) repeats and five fibronectin
type III repeats in its extracellular domain (see Fig.
1A). The short cytoplasmic tail interacts with a
number of kinases, such as calmodulin kinase II (Wong et al.,
1996a ), p90rsk (Wong et al., 1996b ), Src
(Ignelzi et al., 1994 ), and EphB2 (Zisch et al., 1997 ), as well as
ankyrin and the cytoskeleton (Davis and Bennett, 1994 ). L1 functions
through both homophilic interactions with L1 expressed on an opposing
cell-surface (Lemmon et al., 1989 ; Miura et al., 1992 ) and heterophilic
interactions with other binding partners, including Ig superfamily
member axonin-1/TAG-1 (Malhotra et al., 1998 ), integrins (Yip et
al., 1998 ), and others (for review, see Brummendorf and Rathjen, 1996 ).
In the developing nervous system, L1 protein is thought to participate
in cell adhesion, neurite outgrowth, axon fasciculation, and neuronal
migration (Fischer et al., 1986 ; Lagenaur and Lemmon, 1987 ; Cervello et al., 1991 ; Asou et al., 1992 ; Miura et al., 1992 ; Hankin and Lagenaur, 1994 ; Zhao et al., 1998 ).
We have studied three clinical missense mutations affecting different
regions of the L1 molecule and producing a spectrum of clinical
severities. Patients with the R184Q amino acid substitution (see Fig.
1A) diagnosed with XLH present with severe
hydrocephalus and a conglomeration of MASA symptoms and often die
within 1 year of birth (Jouet et al., 1994 ). Patients with the D598N
mutation present with MASA syndrome with no overt hydrocephalus, a less severe phenotype than R184Q (Vits et al., 1994 ; De Angelis et al.,
1999 ). S1194L mutation patients have been diagnosed with MASA or XLH
(Fransen et al., 1994 ), showing a midrange severity. To understand how
these single base substitutions affect the function of L1 protein and
cause such a spectrum of developmental disorders, we expressed the
mutant proteins in primary cells of the nervous system using defective
herpes simplex virus (HSV) vectors (dv) (Yazaki et al., 1996 ).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Construction of mutant L1 amplicon plasmids. Amplicon
plasmid pHC-hL1 encoding human L1 (Yazaki et al., 1996 ) and pHCL
encoding lacZ (Kaplitt et al., 1991 ) have been described
previously. pHC-AP, encoding human placental alkaline phosphatase (AP)
(Berger et al., 1987 ), was constructed from pHCL-CAP (New and Rabkin,
1996 ) by digestion with SpeI and ligation of the large
fragment. pHC-hL1 plasmids encoding the R184Q (G551A), D598N (G1792A),
and S1194L (C3581T) mutant forms of L1 were generated using the
GeneEditor site-directed mutagenesis kit (Promega, Madison, WI) as
directed. The following 5' phosphorylated HPLC purified antisense
primers (Bio-Synthesis Inc., Lewisville, TX) were used for mutagenesis: G551A, 5'-ATC GTC ACC TGC TCG TCC TGC TTG ATG-3'; G1792A, 5'-CTC CAC CAC ATT CAG TTC GGT ACT GGC CAC-3'; and C3581T, 5'-CGT TGA GCA ATG GCT GGC TGC-3'. Mutations were confirmed by changes in restriction endonuclease sites (loss of BsrBI
and gain of BspMI for G551A, loss of XcmI for
G1792A, and gain of BsrDI for C3581T) and automated
fluorescent dye-labeled terminator sequencing on a Perkin-Elmer
(Emeryville, CA) Applied Biosystem 377 DNA sequencer. The L1
transmembrane domain and signal sequence from each plasmid were also
sequenced to rule out additional errant mutations affecting protein trafficking.
Defective HSV vector generation. Purified amplicon plasmid
DNA was cotransfected with HSV tsK DNA into Vero cells using
Lipofectamine (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) as described
by the manufacturer, and incubated at permissive temperature for tsK
(31.5°C) until total cytopathic effect was observed. Virus was
passaged at high multiplicity until the best defective vector to helper
virus ratio was reached. Virus stocks were prepared by a
freeze-thaw-sonication regimen, followed by low-speed centrifugation
(2000 × g for 10 min at 4°C) to remove cell debris,
and stored in 3% Ficoll. TsK helper virus (obtained from J. Subak-Sharpe Institute of Virology, Glasgow, Scotland) was titered on
Vero cells by plaque assay [plaque forming units (pfu)] at the
permissive temperature (31.5°C). Defective vector was titered on Vero
cells under nonpermissive conditions for the helper virus
(39.5°C) by counting individual transgene-expressing cells
[defective particle units (dpu)] after immunohistochemistry for L1,
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl- -D-galactopyranoside
(X-gal) histochemistry for -galactosidase, or
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate/nitroblue tetrazoliumchloride
histochemistry for AP (New and Rabkin, 1996 ). The titers of the
defective vector stocks used were as follows: dvHCL (encoding
lacZ), 1.5 × 107 dpu/ml:
9.5 × 107 pfu/ml; dvHC-AP (encoding
human placental alkaline phosphatase), 2 × 107 dpu/ml: 2 × 108 pfu/ml; dvHC-hL1, 1.3 × 106 dpu/ml: 1.1 × 107 pfu/ml; dvHC-hL1(R184Q), 2.5 × 106 dpu/ml: 3 × 107 pfu/ml; dvHC-hL1(D598N), 8.8 × 105 dpu/ml: 9.6 × 106 pfu/ml; and dvHC-hL1(S1194L), 2.8 × 106 dpu/ml: 2.1 × 107 pfu/ml. Titers of L1 defectives are
likely undercounted because of the sensitivity of L1 immunohistochemistry.
Cell cultures. Vero (African green monkey kidney) and COS-7
[Vero cells transformed with SV40 T-Ag (Cosman and Tevethia, 1981 )] cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection and cultured
in DMEM (Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% calf serum
(CS) (HyClone, Logan, UT). L3-1 cells, mouse L fibroblasts stably
transfected with rat L1, kindly provided by Dr. K. Uyemura (Keio
University, Tokyo, Japan) (Miura et al., 1992 ), were cultured in
DMEM-10% CS with 500 µg/ml G-418 (Life Technologies).
Primary astrocytes were prepared from postnatal day 6 (P6) rat
cerebella using a modification of the procedure of Levi et al. (1989) .
Cerebellum was dissected out, and meninges were removed. Cells were
mechanically dispersed, treated with trypsin and DNase-soybean trypsin
inhibitor (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), plated, and passaged in 10% fetal
calf serum (FCS) (HyClone)-DMEM and antibiotic-antimycotic (BioFluids, Rockville, MD) to purify astrocytes. Passage 4 to 5 astrocyte cultures were used in experiments (Yazaki et al., 1996 ).
Cells stained positively for glial fibrillary acidic protein using
immunofluorescence [monoclonal antibody (mAb); Sigma].
Cerebellar granule cell (CGC) neurons were isolated from P6 rat
cerebella (Levi et al., 1989 ). Long-term cultures were resuspended in
Complete Media (Basal Media Eagle, 10% fetal calf serum, 5 mM glutamine, 1% antibiotics, and 25 mM KCl),
plated at 2.5 × 105
cells/cm2 in
poly-D-lysine-coated four-well chamber slides (Nunc,
Naperville, IL), treated 1 d later with AraC (2.5 µg/ml), and
infected after 6 d in vitro. CGCs (5 × 106) for neurite outgrowth assays were
washed with sterile PBS without Ca2+ or
Mg2+ (PBS), incubated in 4 mg/ml PKH26
fluorescent dye (Sigma) for 5 min, washed twice in Complete Media, and
plated on astrocyte monolayers as described below.
Cells were infected with dv diluted in PBS with 1 gm/l glucose and 1%
heat-inactivated FCS (PBS-GS) and incubated at 37.5°C for 1.5-2 hr.
The inoculum was removed, replaced with DMEM with 1% heat-inactivated
FCS, 5 mM glutamine, and 1% antibiotics, and the infected
cultures were incubated at 39.5°C to minimize helper virus (tsK) toxicity.
Neurite outgrowth assay. Astrocytes in two-well chamber
slides were infected at a 0.25 multiplicity of infection (number of dv
particles per cell, dv titer determined in Vero cells), which resulted
in ~15-20% transgene-positive cells as determined by L1
immunofluorescence of fixed-permeabilized duplicate cultures. Two hours
after infection, PKH26-labeled CGCs (2 × 104 per well) were plated on the infected
astrocytes and incubated in DMEM with 25 mM HEPES
and N2 media supplement (Life Technologies) at 39.5°C for 18 hr.
Cultures were washed with PBS, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS
for 20 min, washed, and coverslipped with Fluormount-G (Southern
Biotechnology, Birmingham, AL).
Fluorescent neurons and neurites were visualized at 400× magnification
on an Olympus Optical (Tokyo, Japan) AH2 Vanox-S microscope using
fluorescence filters for rhodamine. Images were digitally captured
using a Toshiba three-chip color CCD low-light level camera, and
neurite lengths were measured using Optimas 5.2 software (Media
Cybernetics). Neurites were defined as cell projections longer than one
cell body width, with no contact on other labeled CGCs (to avoid the
tropic effect of endogenous L1 and other neuronally expressed surface
molecules). Normalized neurite lengths were computed within each
experiment using neurite lengths of CGCs on mock-infected astrocytes.
These normalized lengths were pooled from four separate experiments and
analyzed using one-way ANOVA. To determine which groups were different
from one another, Tukey's studentized range tests were used.
Immunostaining for L1. Cells were infected with
102-103 dpu
of indicated dv, and incubated for 16.5 hr at 39.5°C. For
immunohistochemical staining, cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde,
permeabilized with 0.25% Triton X-100, incubated with 1:1000 5G3
anti-human L1 mAb (generous gift of Ralph Reisfeld, Scripps Research
Institute, La Jolla, CA), washed, blocked with 10% horse serum, and
incubated with biotinylated horse anti-mouse antibody (Ab) (1:1000;
Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Bound Ab was detected with
horseradish peroxide-conjugated avidin (Vectastain Elite kit; Vector)
and visualized by incubation with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine, 0.05%
NH4Cl, 1% glucose, and glucose oxidase (1.5 U/ml; Sigma). Pictures were taken on a Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) Diaphot microscope.
For surface human L1 staining, cells were washed with chilled PBS and
incubated with 5G3 anti-human L1 mAb (1:1000) in DMEM-10% FCS at
4°C for 1.5 hr. Cells were washed, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde in
PBS, washed, blocked in PBS with 10% normal goat serum for 1 hr, and
incubated with rhodamine red-conjugated goat anti-mouse antibody
(1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) at room temperature for
1 hr. Fixed-permeabilized cell labeling was performed as above, except
cells were fixed and then permeabilized with 0.25% Triton X-100 in PBS
before incubation with primary Ab. Live/fixed-permeabilized double
immunofluorescence was performed as above for surface L1 except Oregon
green-conjugated goat anti-mouse Ab (1:500; Molecular Probes, Eugene,
OR) was used as the secondary Ab. Excess primary Ab was blocked with
goat anti-mouse IgG (1:20; Sigma) in 10% goat serum in PBS for 1 hr at
room temperature. Cells were then permeabilized, incubated with 5G3 mAb
for 1.5 hr, and finally with rhodamine red-labeled goat anti-mouse Ab.
Cells were coverslipped with Fluormount-G.
Blinded quantification was performed by counting positive cells in
multiple rows per treatment well using either FITC or rhodamine bandpass filters on a Nikon Optiphot microscope. At least five random
rows of a two- or four-well chamber slide were examined for each
treatment. Average numbers of positively stained cells were determined
per row. Matched surface/permeabilized immunofluorescence staining
ratios were analyzed with or without logarithmic transformation using
one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey's studentized range test. Images
(single 0.1 µm sections) were taken on an Olympus confocal laser-scanning microscope with Fluoview 2.0 software.
Deglycosylation and immunoblotting of L1. Astrocytes were
infected at a multiplicity of infection of 0.5 and incubated overnight at 39.5°C. Cells were washed and then suspended in chilled 20 mM Tris-1 mM EDTA using a
cell scraper, pelleted, and resuspended in cracking buffer (130 mM Tris-HCl, 20% glycerol, 3%
-mercaptoethanol, 3% SDS, and 0.03% bromphenol blue). Lysates (5 µg of R184Q and D598N or 12 µg of L1, S1194L, lacZ, AP,
mock, and L3-1) were denatured for 5 min at 95°C and incubated
overnight in 75 mM sodium citrate, pH 5.5, and
0.05% PMSF with or without 0.5 mU of endoglycosidase H (Boehringer
Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) at 37°C. Samples were denatured,
separated by 5% SDS-PAGE, and transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Immobilon; Millipore, Bedford, MA). The membrane was blocked overnight with Detector Block (KPL, Gaithersburg, MD),
incubated for 2 hr at 4°C with rabbit L1-C anti-L1 polyclonal Ab
(1:1000 in Detector Block), which recognizes L1 from all mammalian species (kindly provided by Dr. K. Uyemura), and washed with TBS with Tween-20 (50 mM Tris, 0.9% NaCl, and 0.1%
Tween-20). Bound primary antibody was detected with HRP-conjugated
donkey anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech, Arlington Heights, IL) and visualized with Supersignal
ECL (Pierce, Rockford, IL), as described by the manufacturer, using
Amersham ECL hyperfilm. Film was scanned, and figures were prepared
using CorelGraphics. Protein concentration was determined using
Bradford assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) on cell lysates prepared by
sonication and freeze-thawing.
 |
RESULTS |
Defective HSV vectors expressing mutant L1
Defective HSV vectors are generated from amplicon plasmids
(containing bacterial plasmid sequences, HSV cis-acting
elements, and foreign transcription units, including promoter and cDNA
for transgene) that are replicated and packaged in cells infected with
helper HSV. Amplicon plasmids containing human L1 cDNA were mutagenized
using oligonucleotides containing single-base changes, G551A, G1792A,
and C3581T, encoding clinical L1 mutations R184Q, D598N, and S1194L,
respectively (Fig. 1A).
Defective vectors encoding these mutant forms of L1 expressed similar
levels of L1 as confirmed by immunohistochemistry of
fixed-permeabilized cells (Fig. 1B). Defective
vectors encoding lacZ (dvHCL), with the cytosolic protein product -galactosidase, and AP (dvHC-AP), a membrane-bound protein, were used as controls.

View larger version (89K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
A, Schematic of the L1 cell
adhesion molecule showing domain structure: Ig-like domains,
I-VI; fibronectin-type III repeats 1-5,
FN-III; transmembrane region, TM; and
cytoplasmic domain, CD. The location of the mutations
(underlined and italicized) are indicated
( ). B, Immunohistochemical staining of L1 protein in
fixed-permeabilized astrocytes after infection with dvL1.
|
|
Neurite extension of cerebellar neurons is enhanced on normal and
S1194L L1-expressing astrocytes
To determine the functional activity of mutant L1 protein, we
examined the ability of cerebellar astrocytes expressing mutant L1 to
stimulate the elongation of CGC neurites. Purified CGCs from P6 rats
were plated on astrocytes expressing wild-type or mutant L1, or as
controls AP or -galactosidase. Infection of astrocytes with dvHCL or
dvHC-AP did not alter the inherent ability of astrocytes to promote a
limited degree of neurite outgrowth (Fig.
2). Only astrocytes expressing wild-type
or S1194L L1 were able to promote neurite outgrowth compared with
mock-infected astrocytes, with a greater than 50% increase in mean
neurite length after 18 hr. R184Q- and D598N-expressing astrocytes did
not elicit any increase in neurite length compared with mock-infected
AP- or -galactosidase-expressing astrocytes.

View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Wild-type and S1194L mutant L1 stimulate neurite
outgrowth. Relative change in mean neurite lengths of CGCs plated on
astrocytes infected with dvL1 (wild-type or indicated mutant), dvHCL
(LacZ), or dvHC-AP (AP). Data pooled from
four separate experiments after normalization to neurite lengths on
mock-infected astrocytes. *p < 0.05 by Tukey's
studentized range tests conducted after one-way ANOVA
(p = 0.0001).
|
|
L1 proteins with mutations in the extracellular region are not
efficiently expressed on the cell surface
One possible reason for the inability of R184Q or D598N L1 to
stimulate neurite outgrowth could be the lack of cell-surface expression. Therefore, we determined the localization of mutant L1
protein using indirect immunofluorescence 16.5 hr after infection of
cells with dvL1. In the first instance, we compared live cell with
fixed or fixed-permeabilized staining of duplicate-infected cerebellar
astrocyte cell cultures using a human L1-specific antibody (Table
1, Astrocytes Live/perm duplicates). We
found that, even in the absence of permeabilization, there was slight
staining of intracellular L1 that did not occur with live-cell staining (data not shown). Second, we sequentially double-stained live and then
fixed-permeabilized cells in the same culture. Cell-surface L1 is
labeled with one fluorophore (Fig.
3A,C,E,G),
and total L1 is labeled with a second (Fig.
3B,D,F,H).
The number of immunofluorescent cells was quantified (Fig. 4), and the
ratio of surface to total labeling indicates the proportion of cells
expressing L1 protein on the cell surface (Table 1, Double
labeling).

View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Surface (A, C,
E, G) and permeabilized
(B, D, F,
H) staining of L1. Double immunofluorescence was
performed on rat cerebellar astrocytes infected with dvL1 (16.5 hr
after infection): wild type, A, B; R184Q,
C, D; D598N, E,
F; and S1194L, G, H. In
most cells expressing R184Q and D598N mutant L1, L1 protein failed
to reach the cell surface. Scale bar, 50 µm.
|
|
All forms of L1 protein were highly expressed in infected astrocytes
(Fig.
3B,D,F,H);
however, only wild-type and S1194L L1 proteins were strongly expressed
on the cell surface of most infected astrocytes (Fig.
3A,G; Table 1). The two L1 proteins
with mutations in the extracellular region, R184Q and D598N, were not
typically detected by live-cell staining (Fig.
3C,E). In general, <15% of infected astrocytes
expressed R184Q or D598N L1 on their cell surface (Table 1). The low
proportion of cells expressing mutant L1 on the their cell surface did
not change when examined at earlier (12 hr) or later (24 hr) times
after infection (data not shown), suggesting that this was not
attributable to more rapid turnover of the mutant proteins or
insufficient time to reach the surface. No dv-infected astrocytes
expressing either AP or -galactosidase stained positive for surface
or cytosolic L1 (data not shown).
To demonstrate that this protein-trafficking defect was not unique to
astrocytes, we examined dvL1-infected CGCs. These cells express
endogenous rat L1 (Fig.
5A). As seen with the
infected astrocytes, dvL1-infected CGC neurons expressed human L1 as
detected after fixation-permeabilization (Fig.
6B,D,F,H).
The human-specific monoclonal antibody (5G3) only detects the exogenous
vector-derived human L1, not endogenous L1 or vector-derived rat L1
(data not shown). Again, only wild-type and S1194L L1 proteins were
consistently detected on the cell surface. This surface expression
covered the entire neuron and was not limited to axons (Fig.
6A,G), a distribution similar to
that seen for endogenous L1 in these cells (Fig. 5). The R184Q and
D598N mutant L1 proteins were not usually expressed on the cell surface
but were distributed in the cytosol and within nerve processes (Fig.
6D,F).

View larger version (23K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Quantification of surface versus permeabilized L1
double labeling on dvL1-infected astrocytes (16.5 hr after infection).
Mean ± SE number of positive cells for surface (open
bars) or permeabilized (filled bars)
staining per row using 20× objective.
|
|

View larger version (54K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Endogenous L1 expression in rat CGC neurons. L1
was detected by immunofluorescence (A) using a
species nonspecific anti-L1 antibody in fixed-permeabilized CGC neurons
(B, differential-interface contrast microscopy). Scale
bar, 50 µm.
|
|
We then tested non-neural cells to determine whether this effect was
nervous system-specific. Again, similar results were seen when Vero
(African green monkey kidney cells) and COS-7 (SV40 immortalized Vero
cells) were infected with dvL1 (Table 1). The only difference was an
increased proportion of cell-surface labeling for D598N L1 protein in
Vero cells; however, the intensity of the surface staining was
very low compared with wild-type or S1194L L1.
L1 proteins with mutations in the extracellular region
are underglycosylated
To evaluate whether vector-derived wild-type and mutant human L1
proteins were full-length, expressed at similar levels, and correctly
modified post-translationally, cell lysates from dvL1-infected astrocytes were separated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted for L1 using a
species nonspecific polyclonal antibody to L1
(Fig. 7). Primary rat astrocytes do not endogenously express L1, because no
protein was detected in mock-, lacZ-, or AP vector-infected astrocytes (Fig. 7, Mock, LacZ, AP).
All L1 mutants expressed similar levels of full-length protein;
however, the R184Q and D598N L1 proteins were not fully modified
post-translationally. Normal and S1194L L1 protein had a characteristic
doublet pattern for L1 (Fig. 7, L1 ,
S1194L ), with apparent molecular weights (MW) of ~210
and 200 kDa (Miura et al., 1992 ). The R184Q and D598N dv-infected cell
lysates only contained the bottom band of the L1 doublet
(Fig. 7, R184Q , D598N ). The top
band of the L1 doublet has been reported to be the
cell-surface form of L1(Zisch et al., 1997 ). This suggests that any
R184Q or D598N L1 protein that reaches the cell surface, as seen with
immunofluorescence, is not fully modified.

View larger version (13K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Surface (A, C,
E, G) and permeabilized
(B, D, F,
H) staining of exogenous L1. Double
immunofluorescence was performed on CGC neurons infected with dvL1
(16.5 hr after infection): wild type, A,
B; R184Q, C, D; D598N,
E, F; and S1194L, G,
H. In most cells expressing R184Q and D598N mutant L1,
L1 protein failed to reach the cell surface but was detected within the
neuronal cytosol, including processes. Scale bar, 20 µm.
|
|

View larger version (62K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Western blot of lysates from vector-infected
astrocytes. Cell lysates were treated with (+) or without ( ) endoH to
remove unmodified N-linked glycosylations. Five (R184Q or D598N) or 12 (all others, so lower MW band at 200 kDa would be visible) µg of
protein were loaded per lane. The upper MW band, the fully glycosylated
form of L1 (~210 kDa), is resistant to endoH (compare with + in L1, S1194L, and L3-1),
whereas the lower MW band of L1 is sensitive.
|
|
During normal glycoprotein processing, translated proteins are
glycosylated in stages, which increases their MW. For N-linked glycosylations, asparagine residues are initially glycosylated in the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER). These glycosylations are later modified and
then extended in sequential compartments of the Golgi (for review, see
(Dennis et al., 1999 ). To test for L1 glycosylation, dv-infected
astrocyte lysates were treated with endoH, which removes unmodified
N-linked glycosylations. The top band of the wild-type and
S1194L L1 doublet was resistant to endoH treatment, whereas the
bottom band was susceptible, as indicated by the
shift in MW after endoH treatment (Fig. 7, L1+,
S1194+). This ~150 kDa shifted band is the same MW as
deglycosylated L1 reported previously (Faissner et al., 1985 ). The
single, bottom band present for R184Q or D598N mutant L1
protein was completely shifted after endoH treatment (Fig. 7,
R184Q+, D598N+). The top band from
L3-1 cells, mouse L fibroblasts stably transfected with rat L1, ran at
a slightly higher position than human L1, and this band is also
endoH-resistant (Fig. 7, L3-1+). This may be because of
differences between rat and human L1 protein or processing differences
in mouse L cells versus rat cerebellar astrocytes. The endoH-sensitive
band of rat L1 from the L3-1 cells runs at the same size as human L1
(Fig. 7, L3-1 vs L1).
Treatment of dvL1-infected astrocytes with
N-acetylgalactosamine, which cleaves O-linked glycosylations,
had no effect on L1 banding pattern (data not shown). This confirms an
earlier report that L1 has no significant O-linked glycosylations
(Faissner et al., 1985 ).
 |
DISCUSSION |
To begin to understand how single amino acid substitutions in
human L1 protein lead to such devastating clinical syndromes, we used
defective HSV vectors to express mutated L1 proteins in cells of the
CNS. We found that R184Q or D598N mutant L1 proteins, which have
extracellular region amino acid substitutions, are not present on the
cell surface of most dvL1-infected cells of CNS and non-CNS origin. The
reason some cells in a population express mutant L1 on the cell surface
whereas the majority do not remains to be determined. This does not
seem to be a phenotype of a particular cell type, because the
proportion was similar in astrocytes, neurons (preliminary data), and
COS-7 cells. The lack of cell-surface expression would result in the
inability of L1 to mediate binding and signaling in cells that express
these mutant L1 proteins in vivo, as illustrated by the
inability of these mutants to promote neurite outgrowth in
vitro. The effect of these single amino acid changes on protein
trafficking rather than protein function also suggests a new model of
how such mutations could cause clinical phenotypes similar to those
seen with mouse null mutations. The degree of cell-surface expression
could affect the severity of disease and account for the large
variability in clinical phenotypes. If these two extracellular domain
mutations are representative, it may also indicate how mutations
throughout different domains of L1 could account for similar phenotypes.
In contrast, the cytoplasmic domain mutant S1194L was expressed on the
cell surface of all these cell types at near normal levels and appeared
to function as well as wild-type L1 as a substrate for neurite
outgrowth when expressed by astrocytes. Western blot analysis showed
that vector-derived normal and S1194L L1 proteins had a characteristic
MW doublet pattern, whereas the R184Q and D598N mutant proteins were
only present as the lower MW form. Zisch et al. (1997) have shown that
the upper MW band of L1 is the cell surface-expressed form of the
protein (Zisch et al., 1997 ), supporting our live cell-surface L1
labeling. A low proportion of cells expressed R184Q and D598N mutant
proteins on their cell surface, yet no upper MW band was detected. This
suggests that the lower MW form of L1 protein is able to the reach the
cell surface, either through the same trafficking pathway as wild-type L1 protein or an entirely different one. The lack of neurite outgrowth activity of the R184Q and D598N mutant proteins could be attributable to the small number of astrocytes expressing L1 on their cell surface
(i.e., a dose-response effect), or that the mutant, incompletely processed forms of L1 at the cell surface are unable to mediate neurite outgrowth.
The lower MW band likely represents newly synthesized, not yet
surface-expressed L1 that is moving through the protein
post-translational processing machinery. R184Q and D598N L1 proteins
were endoH-sensitive and therefore received N-linked glycosylations in
the ER but were not further modified in the Golgi apparatus (making
them endoH-resistant) (Dennis et al., 1999 ). Normally a protein is not
trafficked to the plasma membrane until its carbohydrate modifications
are complete, i.e., glycosylations in the ER and modifications-changes
to these glycosylations in the Golgi.
Possible fates of mutant L1 proteins
One explanation for R184Q and D598N mistargeting would be
misfolding of the protein. Modeling studies suggest this possibility for the R184Q mutant but not the D598N mutant (Bateman et al., 1996 ).
Misfolded proteins are often targeted for degradation, yet both the
R184Q and D598N mutant proteins were expressed at similar levels as
wild-type L1 protein. We did not find evidence for ubiquination of
these mutant proteins (data not shown). Molecular modeling suggests
that R184Q is part of a buried salt bridge (Bateman et al., 1996 ),
whereas peptide inhibition studies suggest it is present on an exposed
surface (Zhao et al., 1998 ). This region of the L1 Ig2 domain has been
shown to be important in adhesion and neurite outgrowth (Zhao et al.,
1998 ), and chimeric L1 protein containing the R184Q mutation has <20%
of wild-type L1 homophilic binding activity (De Angelis et al., 1999 ).
The combination of limited cell-surface expression of the R184Q mutant
protein and its decreased binding activity could generate the severe
phenotype seen in patients.
The D598N change resides within the Ig6 domain, which induces neurite
outgrowth, supposedly because of the RGD sequence that does not
include position 598 (Felding-Habermann et al., 1997 ; Yip et al.,
1998 ). Molecular modeling of the L1 extracellular domains identified
position 598 as a "conserved-surface" residue; i.e., not critical
in protein folding but nevertheless conserved among species (Bateman et
al., 1996 ). Because this residue is unlikely to disrupt the integrity
the domain, it likely affects an interaction with a ligand of L1
(Brummendorf et al., 1998 ). In contrast to an extracellular ligand, it
may interact with an intracellular chaperone or other ligand during
post-translational processing. Substitution of asparagine at this site
introduces a possible substrate for additional glycosylation, but
analysis using Motif (http://www.motif.genome.ad.jp/) did not
identify this sequence as a candidate for additional glycosylation. A
recombinant protein containing the extracellular region of L1 with the
D598N mutation had only a small reduction in homophilic binding (De Angelis et al., 1999 ). Therefore, the limited surface expression of
this mutant is likely the root of its physiological defect and provides
a rationale for the conservation of this residue across species.
In contrast to our results, De Angelis et al. (1999) reported recently
that transiently transfected COS cells expressed R184Q and D598N mutant
proteins on their cell surface. We have found that paraformaldehyde
fixation can permeabilize cells enough to detect cytosolic antigens,
which does not occur with live-cell staining. Others have shown that
dv-derived gene products are trafficked correctly to various
subcellular compartments in neurons (Craig et al., 1995 ; West et al.,
1997 ; Jareb and Banker, 1998 ; Stowell and Craig, 1999 ), suggesting that
dv infection does not disrupt normal protein processing and trafficking.
Contrary to the extracellular domain substitutions, the S1194L
intracellular domain mutant protein behaved like wild-type L1. The
S1194L mutant protein was expressed on the cell surface at levels
similar to wild-type L1, induced neurite outgrowth as a substrate as
well as wild-type, and had the same post-translational modifications.
However, our studies did not examine the intracellular signaling
properties of L1. S1194 is neither within the ankyrin binding domain
(Davis and Bennett, 1994 ; Dahlin-Huppe et al., 1997 ; Garver et al.,
1997 ; Hortsch et al., 1998 ; Zhang et al., 1998 ), nor is this serine
normally phosphorylated (Heiland et al., 1996 ; Wong et al., 1996a ,b ).
Still, it is conserved among human, rat, mouse, chick, and even
Drosophila homologs of L1 (Zisch et al., 1997 ), and patients
with this mutation can be quite severely affected, being diagnosed with
either XLH or MASA syndrome.
Clinical parallels in other systems
There are a few examples of clinically relevant proteins being
mistargeted because of single amino acid changes. M467T and M467K
substitutions in the rBAT protein result in cystinuria; the protein
shows delayed trafficking to the surface and underglycosylation (Calonge et al., 1994 ; Chillaron et al., 1997 ). We did not observe any
change in surface expression of either R184Q or D598N L1 protein at up
to 24 hr after infection (data not shown). The R281W substitution in
the Kell glycoprotein, found on red blood cells, results in decreased
cell-surface expression and altered glycosylation (Yazdanbakhsh et al.,
1999 ). As with the L1 mutants, the mutant Kell glycoprotein is
endoH-sensitive. Additional clinical examples occur in the cystic
fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (Smit et al., 1995 ), low
density lipoprotein receptor (Pathak et al., 1988 ), intestinal
surcrase-isomaltase (Fransen et al., 1991 ), and
IIb 3 integrin (Wilcox
et al., 1994 ). These and other examples of altered processing of glycoproteins, together with our results, suggest this to
be an important mechanism by which mutant surface proteins fail to achieve normal function, regardless of their tissue or cell of
origin. To our knowledge, the results presented here are the first
evidence suggesting such a mechanism in the developing CNS.
Alterations in ER processing of proteins have been divided into two
classes: those that lead to degradation of the protein and those that
accumulate in the ER (Aridor et al., 1999 ). We do not believe the
mutant L1 proteins are rapidly degraded because their levels are
similar to normal L1 protein, and inhibitors that block the proteasome
degradation pathway do not alter the levels of wild-type or mutant L1
protein (our unpublished observations). However, L1 also fails
to exclusively colocalize with the ER markers concanavalin A and
calnexin (our unpublished observations).
Implications for the classification of L1 CAM mutations
L1 mutations have been divided into three classes: nonsense
mutations generating truncated and presumably secreted protein, thereby
leaving the cell surface devoid of L1 and having a more profound and
severe effect on the patient; missense mutations, divided into
extracellular and intracellular locales, theoretically interfering with
L1 binding, signaling, or both, but usually having a more mild
phenotype (Yamasaki et al., 1997 ; Fransen et al., 1998b ). In light of
our results, it might be useful to reclassify mistrafficked mutants,
such as R184Q and D598N, which would result in little or no functional
L1 on the cell surface. This may clarify why some of the extracellular
substitution mutations have been difficult to classify, because they
can result in either severe or milder phenotypes (Yamasaki et al.,
1997 ; Fransen et al., 1998b ). It remains to be determined whether these
mistrafficked mutant proteins interact or interfere with intracellular
signaling pathways.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 3, 2000; revised April 19, 2000; accepted May 3, 2000.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Training Grant
T32 HD07459 (H.D.M.) and an ARCS Foundation scholarship. We
thank Ralph Reisfeld for the 5G3 antibody, Keiichi Uyemura for the L1-C
antibody and L3-1 cells, Takahito Yazaki for constructing plasmid
pHC-hL1, and Matthew Kelley, Barbara Bregman, Geoff Goodhill, Rodolfo
Rivas, and Pablo Hernaiz Driever for helpful discussions and critical
comments. Also instrumental were Henry Yang in the Lombardi Sequencing
Core Facility, Mariella C. Tefft of the Lombardi Biostatistics Unit,
and Dr. Suzette Mueller, Director of the Lombardi Microscopy Core
Facility. We thank the members of the Rabkin and Martuza laboratories
for their valuable advice and encouragement throughout the course of
this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Samuel D. Rabkin at his present
address: Massachusetts General Hospital East, Building 149, Room 2510, Box 17, Charlestown, MA 02129. E-mail:
rabkin{at}helix.mgh.harvard.edu.
Dr. Martuza's present address: Neurosurgery Service, Massachusetts
General Hospital, WHT 502, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Aridor M,
Bannykh SI,
Rowe T,
Balch WE
(1999)
Cargo can modulate COPII vesicle formation from the endoplasmic reticulum.
J Biol Chem
274:4389-4399[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Asou H,
Miura M,
Kobayashi M,
Uyemura K
(1992)
The cell adhesion molecule L1 has a specific role in neural cell migration.
NeuroReport
3:481-484[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Bateman A,
Jouet M,
MacFarlane J,
Du JS,
Kenwrick S,
Chothia C
(1996)
Outline structure of the human L1 cell adhesion molecule and the sites where mutations cause neurological disorders.
EMBO J
15:6050-6059[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Berger J,
Garattini E,
Hua JC,
Udenfriend S
(1987)
Cloning and sequencing of human intestinal alkaline phosphatase cDNA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
84:695-698[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Brummendorf T,
Rathjen FG
(1996)
Structure/function relationships of axon-associated adhesion receptors of the immunoglobulin superfamily.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
6:584-593[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Brummendorf T,
Kenwrick S,
Rathjen FG
(1998)
Neural cell recognition molecule L1: from cell biology to human hereditary brain malformations.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
8:87-97[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Calonge MJ,
Gasparini P,
Chillaron J,
Chillon M,
Gallucci M,
Rousaud F,
Zelante L,
Testar X,
Dallapiccola B,
Di Silverio F,
Barcelo P,
Estivill X,
Zorzano A,
Nunes V,
Papacín M
(1994)
Cystinuria caused by mutations in rBAT, a gene involved in the transport of cystine.
Nat Genet
6:420-425[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Cervello M,
Lemmon V,
Landreth G,
Rutishauser U
(1991)
Phosphorylation-dependent regulation of axon fasciculation.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
88:10548-10552[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Chillaron J,
Estevez R,
Samarzija I,
Waldegger S,
Testar X,
Lang F,
Zorzano A,
Busch A,
Palacin M
(1997)
An intracellular trafficking defect in type I cystinuria rBAT mutants M467T and M467K.
J Biol Chem
272:9543-9549[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cohen NR,
Taylor JS,
Scott LB,
Guillery RW,
Soriano P,
Furley AJ
(1998)
Errors in corticospinal axon guidance in mice lacking the neural cell adhesion molecule L1.
Curr Biol
8:26-33[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Cosman DJ,
Tevethia MJ
(1981)
Characterization of a temperature-sensitive, DNA-positive, nontransforming mutant of simian virus 40.
Virology
112:605-624[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Craig AM,
Wyborski RJ,
Banker G
(1995)
Preferential addition of newly synthesized membrane protein at axonal growth cones.
Nature
375:592-594[Medline].
-
Dahlin-Huppe K,
Berglund E,
Ranscht B,
Stallcup W
(1997)
Mutational analysis of the L1 neuronal cell adhesion molecule identifies membrane-proxomal amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain that are required for cytoskeletal anchorage.
Mol Cell Neurosci
9:144-156[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Dahme M,
Bartsch U,
Martini R,
Anliker B,
Schachner M,
Mantei N
(1997)
Disruption of the mouse L1 gene leads to malformations of the nervous system.
Nat Genet
17:346-349[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Davis JQ,
Bennett V
(1994)
Ankyrin binding activity shared by the neurofascin/L1/NrCAM family of nervous system cell adhesion molecules.
J Biol Chem
269:27163-27166[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
De Angelis E,
MacFarlane J,
Du JS,
Yeo G,
Hicks R,
Rathjen FG,
Kenwrick S,
Brummendorf T
(1999)
Pathological missense mutations of neural cell adhesion molecule L1 affect homophilic and heterophilic binding activities.
EMBO J
18:4744-4753[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Demyanenko GP,
Tsai AY,
Maness PF
(1999)
Abnormalities in neuronal process extension, hippocampal development, and the ventricular system of L1 knockout mice.
J Neurosci
19:4907-4920[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dennis JW,
Granovsky M,
Warren CE
(1999)
Protein glycosylation in development and disease.
BioEssays
21:412-421[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Faissner A,
Teplow DB,
Kubler D,
Keilhauer G,
Kinzel V,
Schachner M
(1985)
Biosynthesis and membrane topography of the neural cell adhesion molecule L1.
EMBO J
4:3105-3113[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Felding-Habermann B,
Silletti S,
Mei F,
Siu CH,
Yip PM,
Brooks PC,
Cheresh DA,
TE OT,
Ginsberg MH,
Montgomery AM
(1997)
A single immunoglobulin-like domain of the human neural cell adhesion molecule L1 supports adhesion by multiple vascular and platelet integrins.
J Cell Biol
139:1567-1581[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fischer G,
Kunemund V,
Schachner M
(1986)
Neurite outgrowth patterns in cerebellar microexplant cultures are affected by antibodies to the cell surface glycoprotein L1.
J Neurosci
6:605-612[Abstract].
-
Fransen JA,
Hauri HP,
Ginsel LA,
Naim HY
(1991)
Naturally occurring mutations in intestinal sucrase-isomaltase provide evidence for the existence of an intracellular sorting signal in the isomaltase subunit.
J Cell Biol
115:45-57[Abstract/Free Full Text][Erratum (1991) 115: 1473].
-
Fransen E,
Schrander-Stumpel C,
Vits L,
Coucke P,
Van Camp G,
Willems PJ
(1994)
X-linked hydrocephalus and MASA syndrome present in one family are due to a single missense mutation in exon 28 of the L1CAM gene.
Hum Mol Genet
3:2255-2256[Free Full Text].
-
Fransen E,
R DH,
Van Camp G,
Verhoye M,
Sijbers J,
Reyniers E,
Soriano P,
Kamiguchi H,
Willemsen R,
Koekkoek SK,
De Zeeuw CI,
De Deyn PP,
Van der Linden A,
Lemmon V,
Kooy RF,
Willems PJ
(1998a)
L1 knockout mice show dilated ventricles, vermis hypoplasia and impaired exploration patterns.
Hum Mol Genet
7:999-1009[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fransen E,
Van Camp G,
R DH,
Vits L,
Willems PJ
(1998b)
Genotype-phenotype correlation in L1 associated diseases.
J Med Genet
35:399-404[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Garver TD,
Ren Q,
Tuvia S,
Bennett V
(1997)
Tyrosine phosphorylation at a site highly conserved in the L1 family of cell adhesion molecules abolishes ankyrin binding and increases lateral mobility of neurofascin.
J Cell Biol
137:703-714[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hankin M,
Lagenaur C
(1994)
Cell adhesion molecules in the early developing mouse retina: retinal neurons show preferential outgrowth in vitro on L1 but not N-CAM.
J Neurobiol
35:472-487.
-
Heiland PC,
Hertlein B,
Traub O,
Griffith LS,
Schmitz B
(1996)
The neural adhesion molecule L1 is phosphorylated on tyrosine and serine residues.
NeuroReport
7:2675-2678[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Hortsch M,
Homer D,
Malhotra JD,
Chang S,
Frankel J,
Jefford G,
Dubreuil RR
(1998)
Structural requirements for outside-in and inside-out signaling by Drosophila neuroglian, a member of the L1 family of cell adhesion molecules.
J Cell Biol
142:251-261[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Ignelzi Jr MA,
Miller DR,
Soriano P,
Maness PF
(1994)
Impaired neurite outgrowth of src-minus cerebellar neurons on the cell adhesion molecule L1.
Neuron
12:873-884[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jareb M,
Banker G
(1998)
The polarized sorting of membrane proteins expressed in cultured hippocampal neurons using viral vectors.
Neuron
20:855-867[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jouet M,
Rosenthal A,
Armstrong G,
MacFarlane J,
Stevenson R,
Paterson J,
Metzenberg A,
Ionasescu V,
Temple K,
Kenwrick S
(1994)
X-linked spastic paraplegia (SPG1), MASA syndrome and X-linked hydrocephalus result from mutations in the L1 gene.
Nat Genet
7:402-407[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Kaplitt M,
Pfaus J,
Kleopolos S,
Hanlon B,
Rabkin S,
Pfaff D
(1991)
Expression of a functional foreign gene in adult mammalian brain following in vivo transfer via herpes simplex virus type 1 defective vector.
Mol Cell Neurosci
2:320-330.
-
Lagenaur C,
Lemmon V
(1987)
An L1-like molecule, the 8D9 antigen, is a potent substrate for neurite extension.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
84:7753-7757[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lemmon V,
Farr KL,
Lagenaur C
(1989)
L1-mediated axon outgrowth occurs via a homophilic binding mechanism.
Neuron
2:1597-1603[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Levi G,
Francesca A,
Ciotti MT,
Thangnipon W,
Kingsbury A,
Balazs R
(1989)
Preparation of 98% pure cerebellar granule cell cultures.
In: A dissection and tissue culture manual of the nervous system (Shahar A,
de Vellis J,
Vernadakis A,
Haber B,
eds), pp 211-214. New York: Liss.
-
Malhotra JD,
Tsiotra P,
Karagogeos D,
Hortsch M
(1998)
Cis-activation of L1-mediated ankyrin recruitment by TAG-1 homophilic cell adhesion.
J Biol Chem
273:33354-33359[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Miura M,
Asou H,
Kobayashi M,
Uyemura K
(1992)
Functional expression of a full-length cDNA coding for rat neural cell adhesion molecule L1 mediates homophilic intercellular adhesion and migration of cerebellar neurons.
J Biol Chem
267:10752-10758[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Moos M,
Tacke R,
Scherer H,
Teplow D,
Fruh K,
Schachner M
(1988)
Neural adhesion molecule L1 as a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily with binding domains similar to fibronectin.
Nature
334:701-703[Medline].
-
New K,
Rabkin S
(1996)
Co-expression of two gene products in the CNS using double-cassette defective herpes simplex virus vectors.
Mol Brain Res
37:317-323[Medline].
-
Pathak RK,
Merkle RK,
Cummings RD,
Goldstein JL,
Brown MS,
Anderson RG
(1988)
Immunocytochemical localization of mutant low density lipoprotein receptors that fail to reach the Golgi complex.
J Cell Biol
106:1831-1841[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Smit LS,
Strong TV,
Wilkinson DJ,
Macek M,
Mansoura Jr MK,
Wood DL,
Cole JL,
Cutting GR,
Cohn JA,
Dawson DC
(1995)
Missense mutation (G480C) in the CFTR gene associated with protein mislocalization but normal chloride channel activity.
Hum Mol Genet
4:269-273[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Stowell JN,
Craig AM
(1999)
Axon/dendrite targeting of metabotropic glutamate receptors by their cytoplasmic carboxy-terminal domains.
Neuron
22:525-536[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Van Camp G,
Fransen E,
Vits L,
Raes G,
Willems PJ
(1996)
A locus-specific mutation database for the neural cell adhesion molecule L1CAM (Xq28).
Hum Mutat
8:391[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Vits L,
Van Camp G,
Coucke P,
Fransen E,
De Boulle K,
Reyniers E,
Korn B,
Poustka A,
Wilson G,
Schrander-Stumpel C,
Winter RM,
Schwartz CE,
Willems PJ
(1994)
MASA syndrome is due to mutations in the neural cell adhesion gene L1CAM.
Nat Genet
7:408-413[Web of Science][Medline].
-
West AE,
Neve RL,
Buckley KM
(1997)
Targeting of the synaptic vesicle protein synaptobrevin in the axon of cultured hippocampal neurons: evidence for two distinct sorting steps.
J Cell Biol
139:917-927[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Wilcox DA,
Wautier JL,
Pidard D,
Newman PJ
(1994)
A single amino acid substitution flanking the fourth calcium binding domain of alpha IIb prevents maturation of the alpha IIb beta 3 integrin complex.
J Biol Chem
269:4450-4457[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Wong EV,
Schaefer AW,
Landreth G,
Lemmon V
(1996a)
Casein kinase II phosphorylates the neural cell adhesion molecule L1.
J Neurochem
66:779-786[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Wong EV,
Schaefer AW,
Landreth G,
Lemmon V
(1996b)
Involvement of p90rsk in neurite outgrowth mediated by the cell adhesion molecule L1.
J Biol Chem
271:18217-18223[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Yamasaki M,
Thompson P,
Lemmon V
(1997)
CRASH syndrome: mutations in L1CAM correlate with severity of the disease.
Neuropediatrics
28:175-178[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Yazaki T,
Martuza RL,
Rabkin SD
(1996)
Expression of L1 in primary astrocytes via a defective herpes simplex virus vector promotes neurite outgrowth and neural cell migration.
Mol Brain Res
43:311-320[Medline].
-
Yazdanbakhsh K,
Lee S,
Yu Q,
Reid ME
(1999)
Identification of a defect in the intracellular trafficking of a kell blood group variant.
Blood
94:310-318[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Yip PM,
Zhao X,
Montgomery AM,
Siu CH
(1998)
The Arg-Gly-Asp motif in the cell adhesion molecule L1 promotes neurite outgrowth via interaction with the alphavbeta3 integrin.
Mol Biol Cell
9:277-290[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zhang X,
Davis JQ,
Carpenter S,
Bennett V
(1998)
Structural requirements for association of neurofascin with ankyrin.
J Biol Chem
273:30785-30794[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zhao X,
Siu CH
(1996)
Differential effects of two hydrocephalus/MASA syndrome-related mutations on the homophilic binding and neuritogenic activities of the cell adhesion molecule L1.
J Biol Chem
271:6563-6566[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zhao X,
Yip PM,
Siu CH
(1998)
Identification of a homophilic binding site in immunoglobulin-like domain 2 of the cell adhesion molecule L1.
J Neurochem
71:960-971[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Zisch AH,
Stallcup WB,
Chong LD,
Dahlin-Huppe K,
Voshol J,
Schachner M,
Pasquale EB
(1997)
Tyrosine phosphorylation of L1 family adhesion molecules: implication of the Eph kinase Cek5.
J Neurosci Res
47:655-665[Web of Science][Medline].
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/20155696-07$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
K. Nagaraj, L. V. Kristiansen, A. Skrzynski, C. Castiella, L. Garcia-Alonso, and M. Hortsch
Pathogenic human L1-CAM mutations reduce the adhesion-dependent activation of EGFR
Hum. Mol. Genet.,
October 15, 2009;
18(20):
3822 - 3831.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. E. Runker, U. Bartsch, K.-A. Nave, and M. Schachner
The C264Y Missense Mutation in the Extracellular Domain of L1 Impairs Protein Trafficking In Vitro and In Vivo
J. Neurosci.,
January 1, 2003;
23(1):
277 - 286.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. De Angelis, A. Watkins, M. Schafer, T. Brummendorf, S. Kenwrick, Y. Sakaki, and T. Ikemura
Disease-associated mutations in L1 CAM interfere with ligand interactions and cell-surface expression
Hum. Mol. Genet.,
January 1, 2002;
11(1):
1 - 12.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. I. More, F.-P. Kirsch, and F. G. Rathjen
Targeted ablation of NrCAM or ankyrin-B results in disorganized lens fibers leading to cataract formation
J. Cell Biol.,
July 9, 2001;
154(1):
187 - 196.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
L. K. Needham, K. Thelen, and P. F. Maness
Cytoplasmic Domain Mutations of the L1 Cell Adhesion Molecule Reduce L1-Ankyrin Interactions
J. Neurosci.,
March 1, 2001;
21(5):
1490 - 1500.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Koroll, F. G. Rathjen, and H. Volkmer
The Neural Cell Recognition Molecule Neurofascin Interacts with Syntenin-1 but Not with Syntenin-2, Both of Which Reveal Self-associating Activity
J. Biol. Chem.,
March 30, 2001;
276(14):
10646 - 10654.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|

|