Glycerophosphodiesterase EDI3 (GPCPD1; GDE5; GDPD6) has been suggested to promote cell migration, adhesion, and spreading, but its mechanisms of action remain uncertain. In this study, we targeted the glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase GPAM along with choline kinase-a (CHKA), the enzymes that catabolize the products of EDI3 to determine which downstream pathway is relevant for migration. Our results clearly showed that GPAM influenced cell migration via the signaling lipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), linking it with GPAM to cell migration. Analysis of GPAM expression in different cancer types revealed a significant association between high GPAM expression and reduced overall survival in ovarian cancer. Silencing GPAM in ovarian cancer cells decreased cell migration and reduced the growth of tumor xenografts. In contrast to these observations, manipulating CHKA did not influence cell migration in the same set of cell lines. Overall, our findings show how GPAM influences intracellular LPA levels to promote cell migration and tumor growth.
Sialylation is essential for development and regeneration in mammals. Using N-propanoylmannosamine, a novel precursor of sialic acid, we were able to incorporate unnatural sialic acids with a prolonged N-acyl side chain (e.g., N-propanoylneuraminic acid) into cell surface glycoconjugates. Here we report that this biochemical engineering of sialic acid leads to a stimulation of neuronal cells. Both PC12 cells and cerebellar neurons showed a significant increase in neurite outgrowth after treatment with this novel sialic acid precursor. Furthermore, also the reestablishment of the perforant pathway was stimulated in brain slices. In addition, we surprisingly identified several cytosolic proteins with regulatory functions, which are differentially expressed after treatment with N-propanoylmannosamine. Because sialic acid is the only monosaccharide that is activated in the nucleus, we hypothesize that transcription could be modulated by the unnatural CMP-Npropanoylneuraminic acid and that sialic acid activation might be a general tool to regulate cellular functions, such as neurite outgrowth.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is implicated in important functions during development and maintenance of the nervous system. Two of the three major isoforms, NCAM 140 and NCAM 180, are transmembrane glycoproteins with large cytoplasmic domains of different length. The purpose of this study was to identify novel intracellular binding partners of NCAM 140 and NCAM 180. We expressed both cytoplasmic domains, as well as cytoplasmic fragments of NCAM, as fusion proteins in Escherichia coli and used them for ligand affinity chromatography or glutathione S-transferase (GST) pull-down assays. By peptide mass fingerprinting Western blot analysis, or both, we identified PLCgamma, LANP, syndapin, PP1, and PP2A as binding partners for both NCAM 140 and NCAM 180, whereas TOAD-64 was identified as a NCAM 180-specific interacting protein. Furthermore, we were able to show that binding of these novel binding proteins, as well as the previously described interaction partners ROK alpha (rho A binding kinase alpha) and alpha- and beta-tubulin, bind to specific cytosolic sequences of NCAM. For this purpose, we performed GST pull-down experiments using cytosolic fragments of NCAM as GST-fusion proteins and cytosolic- or cytoskeleton-enriched protein fractions of rat brain.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is one of the best-characterized cell adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin superfamily. In the nervous system, NCAM is involved in cell migration, axon fasciculation and in neurite outgrowth. Neurite outgrowth is mediated by homophilic NCAM-NCAM interactions. Alternative splicing generates three major isoforms of NCAM differing in their intracellular portion. Two of them, NCAM 180 and NCAM 140, are transmembrane proteins with large intracellular domains. The present study is concerned with novel details of the intracellular domains of NCAM 140 and NCAM 180. We expressed these NCAM isoforms consisting only of the transmembrane and intracellular domains (without extracellular domains) in PC12 cells and elaborated their function in neurite outgrowth assays. Our data demonstrate that membrane-associated NCAM 180 interferes with neurite outgrowth, whereas membrane-associated NCAM 140 promotes neurite outgrowth.
We have developed a chlorine based dry etching process for nanopatterning the ferromagnetic oxide La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (LSMO). Large arrays of millions of identical structures have been fabricated from thin LSMO films by electron-beam lithography and reactive ion etching. SQUID magnetometry demonstrates that patterned nanostructures with lateral dimensions down to 100 nm retain their full magnetization and the Curie temperature of the bulk layer. In addition, their shape anisotropy is sufficient to overcome the crystalline anisotropy of the bulk. High resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy shows that crystallinity is preserved even at the edges of the nanostructures.
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