The Ca(2+)-dependent intercellular adhesion molecule cadherin is known to be linked to the cytoskeleton by the protein catenin, an association of which appears to be important for the cell-adhesion function of cadherin. Catenin consists of three subtypes-alpha, beta, and gamma. In our previous study, N-cadherin was shown to be localized on the plasmalemma of normal and regenerating chick peripheral nerve. Thus, as alpha N-catenin is a subtype of alpha-catenin (which is specifically associated with N-cadherin), we investigated the immunolocalization of alpha N-catenin in normal and regenerating chick sciatic nerve. In normal nerve, unmyelinated axons exhibited either intense or weak alpha N-catenin immunoreactivity throughout the axoplasm, whereas myelinated axons were completely immunonegative. Regenerating axons, including those derived from parent myelinated axons, showed alpha N-catenin immunoreactivity of variable intensities in growth cones and axon shafts. Schwann cells were invariably devoid of immunoreactivity. Thus alpha N-catenin is not necessarily bound to the surface plasmalemma, but is distributed throughout the cytoplasm, suggesting that most alpha N-catenin molecules are dissociated from N-cadherin.
The ultrastructural localization of R-cadherin in normal and regenerating chick sciatic nerves was investigated immunocytochemically, and was compared with that of N-cadherin. R-cadherin was found on the plasmalemmae of axons and Schwann cells where cell-cell contacts were made in the normal unmyelinated fibers. It was also noted that R-cadherin was expressed on the axolemmae where regenerating axons contacted with each other, and formed fasciculations. The normal myelinated fibers displayed no immunoreactivity except at the mesaxon. These findings of R-cadherin were almost the same as those of N-cadherin of our previous study. N- and R-cadherin seemed to be co-expressed at the cell-cell contact points as mentioned above in the double labeling study. It is probable that cadherins contribute to the pathfinding of regenerating axons by causing them to form fasciculation. However, it seemed that there was no selective sorting of axons by N- and R-cadherin during regeneration as far as the present study was concerned.
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