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Publication : Domain-specific gene disruption reveals critical regulation of neuregulin signaling by its cytoplasmic tail.

First Author  Liu X Year  1998
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  95
Issue  22 Pages  13024-9
PubMed ID  9789034 Mgi Jnum  J:50592
Mgi Id  MGI:1306982 Doi  10.1073/pnas.95.22.13024
Citation  Liu X, et al. (1998) Domain-specific gene disruption reveals critical regulation of neuregulin signaling by its cytoplasmic tail. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95(22):13024-9
abstractText  Neuregulins are a multi-isoform family of growth factors that activate members of the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases. The membrane-anchored isoforms contain the receptor-activating ligand in their extracellular domain, a single membrane-spanning region, and a long cytoplasmic tail. To evaluate the potential biological role of the intracellular domain of the membrane-anchored neuregulin isoforms, we used a domain-specific gene disruption approach to produce a mouse line in which only the region of the neuregulin gene encoding almost the entire intracellular domain was disrupted. Consistent with previous reports in which all neuregulin isoforms were disrupted, the resulting homozygous neuregulin mutants died at E10.5 of circulatory failure and displayed defects in neural and cardiac development. To further understand these in vivo observations, we evaluated a similarly truncated neuregulin construct after transient expression in COS-7 cells. This cytoplasmic tail-deleted mutant, unlike wild-type neuregulin isoforms, was resistant to proteolytic release of its extracellular-domain ligand, a process required for erbB receptor activation. Thus, proteolytic processing of the membrane-bound neuregulin isoforms involved in cranial ganglia and heart embryogenesis is likely developmentally regulated and is critically controlled by their intracellular domain. This observation indicates that erbB receptor activation by membrane-bound neuregulins most likely involves a unique temporally and spatially regulated inside-out signaling process that is critical for processing and release of the extracellular-domain ligand.
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