Inhibition of motor axon growth by T-cadherin substrata

BJ Fredette, JMB Ranscht - Development, 1996 - journals.biologists.com
BJ Fredette, JMB Ranscht
Development, 1996journals.biologists.com
As spinal motor neurons project to their hindlimb targets, their growth cones avoid particular
regions along their pathway. T-cadherin is discretely distributed in the avoided caudal
sclerotome and on extrasynaptic muscle surfaces (BJ Fredette and B. Ranscht (1994) J.
Neurosci. 14, 7331-7346), and therefore, the ability of T-cadherin to inhibit neurite growth
was tested in vitro. T-cadherin inhibited neurite extension from select neuron populations
both as a substratum, and as a soluble recombinant protein. Anti-T-cadherin antibodies …
Abstract
As spinal motor neurons project to their hindlimb targets, their growth cones avoid particular regions along their pathway. T-cadherin is discretely distributed in the avoided caudal sclerotome and on extrasynaptic muscle surfaces (B. J. Fredette and B. Ranscht (1994) J. Neurosci. 14, 7331-7346), and therefore, the ability of T-cadherin to inhibit neurite growth was tested in vitro. T-cadherin inhibited neurite extension from select neuron populations both as a substratum, and as a soluble recombinant protein. Anti-T-cadherin antibodies neutralized the inhibition. Spinal motor neurons were inhibited only during the stages of axon growth across the sclerotome and muscle innervation. Inhibitory responses corresponded to neuronal T-cadherin expression, suggesting a homophilic binding mechanism. These results suggest that T-cadherin is a negative guidance cue for motor axon projections.
journals.biologists.com