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Publication : Forward signaling by EphB1/EphB2 interacting with ephrin-B ligands at the optic chiasm is required to form the ipsilateral projection.

First Author  Chenaux G Year  2011
Journal  Eur J Neurosci Volume  34
Issue  10 Pages  1620-33
PubMed ID  22103419 Mgi Jnum  J:184158
Mgi Id  MGI:5320370 Doi  10.1111/j.1460-9568.2011.07845.x
Citation  Chenaux G, et al. (2011) Forward signaling by EphB1/EphB2 interacting with ephrin-B ligands at the optic chiasm is required to form the ipsilateral projection. Eur J Neurosci 34(10):1620-33
abstractText  EphB receptor tyrosine kinases direct axonal pathfinding through interactions with ephrin-B proteins following axon-cell contact. As EphB:ephrin-B binding leads to bidirectional signals, the contributions of signaling into the Eph-expressing cell (forward signaling) or the ephrin-expressing cell (reverse signaling) cannot be assigned using traditional protein null alleles. To determine if EphB1 is functioning solely as a receptor during axon pathfinding, a new knock-in mutant mouse was created, EphB1(T-lacZ), which expresses an intracellular-truncated EphB1-beta-gal fusion protein from the endogenous locus. As in the EphB1(-/-) protein null animals, the EphB1(T-lacZ/T-lacZ) homozygotes fail to form the ipsilateral projecting subpopulation of retinal ganglion cell axons. This indicates that reverse signaling through the extracellular domain of EphB1 is not required for proper axon pathfinding of retinal axons at the optic chiasm. Further analysis of other EphB and ephrin-B mutant mice shows that EphB1 is the preferred receptor of ephrin-B2 and, to a lesser degree, ephrin-B1 in mediating axon guidance at the optic chiasm despite the coexpression of EphB2 in the same ipsilaterally projecting retinal axons.
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