Molecular Brain (Apr 2021)

Phosphorylation of GAP-43 T172 is a molecular marker of growing axons in a wide range of mammals including primates

  • Masayasu Okada,
  • Yosuke Kawagoe,
  • Yuta Sato,
  • Motohiro Nozumi,
  • Yuya Ishikawa,
  • Atsushi Tamada,
  • Hiroyuki Yamazaki,
  • Yuko Sekino,
  • Yonehiro Kanemura,
  • Yohei Shinmyo,
  • Hiroshi Kawasaki,
  • Naoko Kaneko,
  • Kazunobu Sawamoto,
  • Yukihiko Fujii,
  • Michihiro Igarashi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13041-021-00755-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract GAP-43 is a vertebrate neuron-specific protein and that is strongly related to axon growth and regeneration; thus, this protein has been utilized as a classical molecular marker of these events and growth cones. Although GAP-43 was biochemically characterized more than a quarter century ago, how this protein is related to these events is still not clear. Recently, we identified many phosphorylation sites in the growth cone membrane proteins of rodent brains. Two phosphorylation sites of GAP-43, S96 and T172, were found within the top 10 hit sites among all proteins. S96 has already been characterized (Kawasaki et al., 2018), and here, phosphorylation of T172 was characterized. In vitro (cultured neurons) and in vivo, an antibody specific to phosphorylated T172 (pT172 antibody) specifically recognized cultured growth cones and growing axons in developing mouse neurons, respectively. Immunoblotting showed that pT172 antigens were more rapidly downregulated throughout development than those of pS96 antibody. From the primary structure, this phosphorylation site was predicted to be conserved in a wide range of animals including primates. In the developing marmoset brainstem and in differentiated neurons derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells, immunoreactivity with pT172 antibody revealed patterns similar to those in mice. pT172 antibody also labeled regenerating axons following sciatic nerve injury. Taken together, the T172 residue is widely conserved in a wide range of mammals including primates, and pT172 is a new candidate molecular marker for growing axons.

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