PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Defining the ligand specificity of the deleted in colorectal cancer (DCC) receptor.

  • Patrick C G Haddick,
  • Irene Tom,
  • Elizabeth Luis,
  • Gabriel Quiñones,
  • Bernd J Wranik,
  • Sree R Ramani,
  • Jean-Philippe Stephan,
  • Marc Tessier-Lavigne,
  • Lino C Gonzalez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084823
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e84823

Abstract

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The growth and guidance of many axons in the developing nervous system require Netrin-mediated activation of Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) and other still unknown signaling cues. Commissural axon guidance defects are more severe in DCC mutant mice than Netrin-1 mutant mice, suggesting additional DCC activating signals besides Netrin-1 are involved in proper axon growth. Here we report that interaction screens on extracellular protein microarrays representing over 1,000 proteins uniquely identified Cerebellin 4 (CBLN4), a member of the C1q-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family, and Netrin-1 as extracellular DCC-binding partners. Immunofluorescence and radio-ligand binding studies demonstrate that Netrin-1 competes with CBLN4 binding at an overlapping site within the membrane-proximal fibronectin domains (FN) 4-6 of DCC and binds with ∼5-fold higher affinity. CBLN4 also binds to the DCC homolog, Neogenin-1 (NEO1), but with a lower affinity compared to DCC. CBLN4-null mice did not show a defect in commissural axons of the developing spinal cord but did display a transient increase in the number of wandering axons in the brachial plexus, consistent with a role in axon guidance. Overall, the data solidifies CBLN4 as a bona fide DCC ligand and strengthens its implication in axon guidance.