Sema3A, a prototypical semaphorin, acts as a chemorepellent or a chemoattractant for axons by activating a receptor complex comprising neuropilin-1 as the ligand-binding subunit and plexin-A1 as the signal-transducing subunit. How the signals downstream of plexin-A1 are triggered upon Sema3A stimulation, however, is unknown. Here we show that, in the presence of neuropilin-1, the FERM domain-containing guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) FARP2 associates directly with plexin-A1. Sema3A binding to neuropilin-1 induces the dissociation of FARP2 from plexin-A1, resulting in activation of FARP2's Rac GEF activity, Rnd1 recruitment to plexin-A1, and downregulation of R-Ras. Simultaneously, the FERM domain of FARP2 sequesters phosphatidylinositol phosphate kinase type I isoform PIPKIgamma661 from talin, thereby inhibiting its kinase activity. These activities are required for Sema3A-mediated repulsion of outgrowing axons and suppression of neuronal adhesion. We therefore conclude that FARP2 is a key molecule involved in the response of neuronal growth cones to class-3 semaphorins.
The hedgehog (Hh) signal pathway has recently been shown to be activated in human malignancies. However, little is known about its role in the development or patient prognosis of epithelial ovarian carcinoma. In the present study, we examined in vivo and in vitro E pithelial ovarian carcinoma, which comprises the majority of malignant ovarian tumors, is the leading cause of death from gynecologic malignancy in women.(1) The survival of ovarian carcinoma patients has not improved significantly for years, indicating that further understanding of the biology of ovarian carcinoma cells is critical for the development of new treatments against this neoplasm.(2) Several studies have reported that the poor prognosis of ovarian carcinoma is related not only to the unique metastasis but also to the high proliferative activity of carcinoma cells.(3-5) However, the molecular mechanisms of the proliferation of ovarian carcinoma cells are not fully understood. Recent studies suggest that the hedgehog (Hh) signal pathway contributes to cell proliferation and differentiation in several human neoplasms, such as pancreas, prostate and skin carcinomas.
The cardiac neural crest, a subpopulation of the neural crest, contributes to the cardiac outflow tract formation during development. However, how it follows the defined long-range migratory pathway remains unclear. We show here that the migrating cardiac neural crest cells (NCCs) express Plexin-A2, Plexin-D1 and Neuropilin. The membrane-bound ligands for Plexin-A2, Semaphorin (Sema)6A and Sema6B, are expressed in the dorsal neural tube and the lateral pharyngeal arch mesenchyme (the NCC "routes"). Sema3C, a ligand for Plexin-D1/neuropilin-1, is expressed in the cardiac outflow tract (the NCC "target"). Sema6A and Sema6B repel neural crest cells, while Sema3C attracts neural crest cells. Sema6A and Sema6B repulsion and Sema3C attraction are diminished either when Plexin-A2 and Neuropilin-1, or when Plexin-D1, respectively, are knocked down in NCCs. When RNAi knockdown diminishes each receptor in NCCs, the NCCs fail to migrate into the cardiac outflow tract in the developing chick embryo. Furthermore, Plexin-A2-deficient mice exhibit defects of cardiac outflow tract formation. We therefore conclude that the coordination of repulsive cues provided by Sema6A/Sema6B through Plexin-A2 paired with the attractive cue by Sema3C through Plexin-D1 is required for the precise navigation of migrating cardiac NCCs.
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