CDB25:0004062 PCDHGA3 — PCDHGA3
Experimentally validated in Mouse; Orthology-inferred in Human, Zebrafish, Dog, Cow, Horse, Sheep
Title
Journal:; Year Published:
Abstract
Combinatorial homophilic interaction between gamma-protocadherin multimers greatly expands the molecular diversity of cell adhesion.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2010; PubMed, Mus Musculus Pcdhga3 — Mus Musculus Pcdhga3
ABSTRACT: The specificity of interactions between neurons is believed to be mediated by diverse cell adhesion molecules, including members of the cadherin superfamily. Whereas mechanisms of classical cadherin adhesion have been studied extensively, much less is known about the related protocadherins (Pcdhs), which together make up the majority of the superfamily. Here we use quantitative cell aggregation assays and biochemical analyses to characterize cis and trans interactions among the 22-member gamma-Pcdh family, which have been shown to be critical for the control of synaptogenesis and neuronal survival. We show that gamma-Pcdh isoforms engage in trans interactions that are strictly homophilic. In contrast to classical cadherins, gamma-Pcdh interactions are only partially Ca(2+)-dependent, and their specificity is mediated through the second and third extracellular cadherin (EC) domains (EC2 and EC3), rather than through EC1. The gamma-Pcdhs also interact both covalently and noncovalently in the cis-orientation to form multimers both in vitro and in vivo. In contrast to gamma-Pcdh trans interactions, cis interactions are highly promiscuous, with no isoform specificity. We present data supporting a model in which gamma-Pcdh cis-tetramers represent the unit of their adhesive trans interactions. Unrestricted tetramerization in cis, coupled with strictly homophilic interactions in trans, predicts that the 22 gamma-Pcdhs could form 234,256 distinct adhesive interfaces. Given the demonstrated role of the gamma-Pcdhs in synaptogenesis, our data have important implications for the molecular control of neuronal specificity.
Single-cell identity generated by combinatorial homophilic interactions between α, β, and γ protocadherins.
Cell, 2014; PubMed, Mus Musculus Pcdhga3 — Mus Musculus Pcdhga3
ABSTRACT: Individual mammalian neurons stochastically express distinct repertoires of α, β, and γ protocadherin (Pcdh) proteins, which function in neural circuit assembly. We report that all three subfamilies of clustered Pcdhs can engage in specific homophilic interactions, that cell surface delivery of Pcdhα isoforms requires cis interactions with other Pcdhs, and that the extracellular cadherin domain EC6 plays a critical role in this process. Examination of homophilic interactions between specific combinations of multiple Pcdh isoforms revealed that Pcdh combinatorial recognition specificities depend on the identity of all of the expressed isoforms. A single mismatched Pcdh isoform can interfere with these combinatorial homophilic interactions. A theoretical analysis reveals that assembly of Pcdh isoforms into multimeric recognition units and the observed tolerance for mismatched isoforms can generate cell surface diversity sufficient for single-cell identity. However, the competing demands of nonself discrimination and self-recognition place limitations on the mechanisms by which homophilic recognition units can function.
Functional test of PCDHB11, the most human-specific neuronal surface protein.
BMC evolutionary biology, 2016; PubMed, Mus Musculus Pcdhga3 — Mus Musculus Pcdhga3
ABSTRACT: Brain-expressed proteins that have undergone functional change during human evolution may contribute to human cognitive capacities, and may also leave us vulnerable to specifically human diseases, such as schizophrenia, autism or Alzheimer's disease. In order to search systematically for those proteins that have changed the most during human evolution and that might contribute to brain function and pathology, all proteins with orthologs in chimpanzee, orangutan and rhesus macaque and annotated as being expressed on the surface of cells in the human central nervous system were ordered by the number of human-specific amino acid differences that are fixed in modern populations.