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Publication : Immunocytochemical localization of CD44 in the mouse retina.

First Author  Chaitin MH Year  1994
Journal  Exp Eye Res Volume  58
Issue  3 Pages  359-65
PubMed ID  7513650 Mgi Jnum  J:19225
Mgi Id  MGI:66523 Doi  10.1006/exer.1994.1026
Citation  Chaitin MH, et al. (1994) Immunocytochemical localization of CD44 in the mouse retina. Exp Eye Res 58(3):359-65
abstractText  The transmembrane glycoprotein CD44 is a cell adhesion molecule which has recently been localized in a variety of cell types. It mediates cell attachment to extracellular matrix components and also binds to the actin cytoskeleton within the cell. In this study, the presence and distribution of CD44 in the mouse retina was investigated in order to determine whether this molecule might be important for retinal cell adhesion. With immunoperoxidase techniques, positive labeling for CD44 was found at the level of the outer limiting membrane and in the region just sclerad to it. However, from these light microscope results it was not clear if the label was in the photoreceptor inner segments, the Muller cell apical microvilli, or both. In order to answer this question, cryoultramicrotomy and immunogold labeling were used to demonstrate that CD44 is specifically localized to the Muller cell microvilli which appose the interphotoreceptor matrix. Western blotting of a retina homogenate showed that the anti-CD44 antibody is specific for a protein of approximately 90 kDa which is the correct molecular weight for the most abundant form of CD44. These results, along with the known binding characteristics of CD44 for the extracellular matrix, suggest that CD44 could play a role in mediating the attachment of the neural retina to components of the interphotoreceptor matrix.
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