Relationship between neuronal migration and cell-substratum adhesion: laminin and merosin promote olfactory neuronal migration but are anti-adhesive.
Open Access
- 1 November 1991
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 115 (3), 779-794
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.115.3.779
Abstract
Regulation by the extracellular matrix (ECM) of migration, motility, and adhesion of olfactory neurons and their precursors was studied in vitro. Neuronal cells of the embryonic olfactory epithelium (OE), which undergo extensive migration in the central nervous system during normal development, were shown to be highly migratory in culture as well. Migration of OE neuronal cells was strongly dependent on substratum-bound ECM molecules, being specifically stimulated and guided by laminin (or the laminin-related molecule merosin) in preference to fibronectin, type I collagen, or type IV collagen. Motility of OE neuronal cells, examined by time-lapse video microscopy, was high on laminin-containing substrata, but negligible on fibronectin substrata. Quantitative assays of adhesion of OE neuronal cells to substrata treated with different ECM molecules demonstrated no correlation, either positive or negative, between the migratory preferences of cells and the strength of cell-substratum adhesion. Moreover, measurements of cell adhesion to substrata containing combinations of ECM proteins revealed that laminin and merosin are anti-adhesive for OE neuronal cells, i.e., cause these cells to adhere poorly to substrata that would otherwise be strongly adhesive. The evidence suggests that the anti-adhesive effect of laminin is not the result of interactions between laminin and other ECM molecules, but rather an effect of laminin on cells, which alters the way in which cells adhere. Consistent with this view, laminin was found to interfere strongly with the formation of focal contacts by OE neuronal cells.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- J1/tenascin is a repulsive substrate for central nervous system neuronsNeuron, 1990
- Mechanisms by which molecules guide axonsCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1990
- Development of the hypothalamic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone-containing neuron system in the rat: In vivo and in transplantation studiesDevelopmental Biology, 1990
- Deposition and role of thrombospondin in the histogenesis of the cerebellar cortex.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- Molecular mechanisms of avian neural crest cell migration on fibronectin and lamininDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- Cell adhesion to fibronectin and tenascin: quantitative measurements of initial binding and subsequent strengthening response.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- Analysis of neurogenesis in a mammalian neuroepithelium: Proliferation and differentiation of an olfactory neuron precursor in vitroNeuron, 1989
- Origin of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone neuronsNature, 1989
- Interference reflection microscopic study of dorsal root growth cones on different substrates: Assessment of growth cone–substrate contactsJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1988
- Selective interaction of peripheral and central nervous system cells with two distinct cell-binding domains of fibronectin.The Journal of cell biology, 1987