CDB15:0000529 EFNB3 — EPHB4

Experimentally validated in Mixed species, Mouse; Orthology-inferred in Human, Mouse, Rat, Frog, Zebrafish, Chicken, Macaque, Pig, Dog, Cow, Chimp, Horse, Marmoset, Sheep

Title

Journal:; Year Published:

Abstract

Profiling Eph receptor expression in cells and tissues: a targeted mass spectrometry approach.

Cell adhesion & migration, 2012; PubMed, Homo sapiens EFNB3 — Mus Musculus Ephb4
ABSTRACT: The Eph receptor tyrosine kinase family includes many members, which are often expressed together in various combinations and can promiscuously interact with multiple ephrin ligands, generating intricate networks of intracellular signals that control physiological and pathological processes. Knowing the entire repertoire of Eph receptors and ephrins expressed in a biological sample is important when studying their biological roles. Moreover, given the correlation between Eph receptor/ephrin expression and cancer pathogenesis, their expression patterns could serve important diagnostic and prognostic purposes. However, profiling Eph receptor and ephrin expression has been challenging. Here we describe a novel and straightforward approach to catalog the Eph receptors present in cultured cells and tissues. By measuring the binding of ephrin Fc fusion proteins to Eph receptors in ELISA and pull-down assays, we determined that a mixture of four ephrins is suitable for isolating both EphA and EphB receptors in a single pull-down. We then used mass spectrometry to identify the Eph receptors present in the pull-downs and estimate their relative levels. This approach was validated in cultured human cancer cell lines, human tumor xenograft tissue grown in mice, and mouse brain tissue. The new mass spectrometry approach we have developed represents a useful tool for the identification of the spectrum of Eph receptors present in a biological sample and could also be extended to profiling ephrin expression.

Eph receptors and ligands comprise two major specificity subclasses and are reciprocally compartmentalized during embryogenesis.

Neuron, 1996; PubMed, Mus Musculus Efnb3 — Mus Musculus Ephb4
ABSTRACT: We report that the many Eph-related receptor tyrosine kinases, and their numerous membrane-bound ligands, can each be grouped into only two major specificity subclasses. Receptors in a given subclass bind most members of a corresponding ligand subclass. The physiological relevance of these groupings is suggested by viewing the collective distributions of all members of a subclass. These composite distributions, in contrast with less informative patterns seen with individual members of the family, reveal that the developing embryo is subdivided into domains defined by reciprocal and apparently mutually exclusive expression of a receptor subclass and its corresponding ligands. Receptors seem to encounter their ligands only at the interface between these domains. This reciprocal compartmentalization implicates the Eph family in the formation of spatial boundaries that may help to organize the developing body plan.
Basic Information on EFNB3
Ligand Name: ephrin B3
Other Symbols: EPLG8, LERK-8
Ligand Location: cell membrane based on perplexity
HGNC Gene Symbol Report: EFNB3
GeneCards: EFNB3
Interactions with other Receptors for EFNB3
Basic Information on EPHB4
Receptor Name: EPH receptor B4
Other Symbols: HTK, Tyro11
Receptor Location: cell membrane based on perplexity, uniprot
Interactions with other Ligands for EPHB4