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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
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28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the embryonic visual system, EphA receptors are expressed on both temporal and nasal retinal ganglion cell axons. Only the temporal axons, however, are sensitive to the low concentrations of ephrin-A ligands found in the anterior optic tectum. The poor responsiveness of nasal axons to ephrin-A ligands, which allows them to traverse the anterior tectum and reach their targets in the posterior tectum, has been attributed to constitutive activation of the
EphA4
receptor expressed in these axons.
EphA4
is highly expressed throughout the retina, but is preferentially phosphorylated on tyrosine (activated) in nasal retina. In a screen for
EphA4
ligands expressed in chicken embryonic retina, we have identified a novel ephrin, ephrin-A6. Like ephrin-A5, ephrin-A6 has high affinity for
EphA4
and activates this receptor in cultured retinal cells. In the embryonic day 8 (E8) chicken visual system, ephrin-A6 is predominantly expressed in the nasal retina and ephrin-A5 in the posterior tectum. Thus, ephrin-A6 has the properties of a ligand that activates the
EphA4
receptor in nasal retinal cells. Ephrin-A6 binds with high affinity to several other EphA receptors as well and causes growth cone
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in retinal explants, demonstrating that it can elicit biological responses in retinal neurons. Ephrin-A6 expression is high at E6 and E8, when retinal axons grow to their tectal targets, and gradually declines at later developmental stages. The asymmetric distribution of ephrin-A6 in retinal cells, and the time course of its expression, suggest that this new ephrin plays a role in the establishment of visual system topography.
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PMID:Ephrin-A6, a new ligand for EphA receptors in the developing visual system. 1116 63
Ephs regulate growth cone repulsion, a process controlled by the actin cytoskeleton. The guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) ephexin1 interacts with
EphA4
and has been suggested to mediate the effect of EphA on the activity of Rho GTPases, key regulators of the cytoskeleton and axon guidance. Using cultured ephexin1-/- mouse neurons and RNA interference in the chick, we report that ephexin1 is required for normal axon outgrowth and ephrin-dependent axon repulsion. Ephexin1 becomes tyrosine phosphorylated in response to EphA signaling in neurons, and this phosphorylation event is required for growth cone
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. Tyrosine phosphorylation of ephexin1 enhances ephexin1's GEF activity toward RhoA while not altering its activity toward Rac1 or Cdc42, thus changing the balance of GTPase activities. These findings reveal that ephexin1 plays a role in axon guidance and is regulated by a switch mechanism that is specifically tailored to control Eph-mediated growth cone
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.
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PMID:Eph-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of ephexin1 modulates growth cone collapse. 1584 93
Signaling by receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) is mediated by their intrinsic kinase activity. Typically, kinase-activating mutations result in ligand-independent signaling and gain-of-function phenotypes. Like other RTKs, Ephs require kinase activity to signal, but signaling by Ephs in vitro also requires clustering by their membrane bound ephrin ligands. The relative importance of Eph kinase activity and clustering for in vivo functions is unknown. We find that knockin mice expressing a mutant form of
EphA4
(
EphA4
(EE)), whose kinase is constitutively activated in the absence of ephrinB ligands, are deficient in the development of thalamocortical projections and some aspects of central pattern generator rhythmicity. Surprisingly, other functions of
EphA4
were regulated normally by
EphA4
(EE), including midline axon guidance, hindlimb locomotion, in vitro growth cone
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, and phosphorylation of ephexin1. These results suggest that signaling of Eph RTKs follows a multistep process of induced kinase activity and higher-order clustering different from RTKs responding to soluble ligands.
...
PMID:Regulation of EphA 4 kinase activity is required for a subset of axon guidance decisions suggesting a key role for receptor clustering in Eph function. 1610 35
The ephrin/Eph system plays a central role in neuronal circuit formation; however, its downstream effectors are poorly understood. Here we show that alpha-chimerin Rac GTPase-activating protein mediates ephrinB3/
EphA4
forward signaling. We discovered a spontaneous mouse mutation, miffy (mfy), which results in a rabbit-like hopping gait, impaired corticospinal axon guidance, and abnormal spinal central pattern generators. Using positional cloning, transgene rescue, and gene targeting, we demonstrated that loss of alpha-chimerin leads to mfy phenotypes similar to those of
EphA4
(-/-) and ephrinB3(-/-) mice. alpha-chimerin interacts with
EphA4
and, in response to ephrinB3/
EphA4
signaling, inactivates Rac, which is a positive regulator of process outgrowth. Moreover, downregulation of alpha-chimerin suppresses ephrinB3-induced growth cone
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in cultured neurons. Our findings indicate that ephrinB3/
EphA4
signaling prevents growth cone extension in motor circuit formation via alpha-chimerin-induced inactivation of Rac. They also highlight the role of a Rho family GTPase-activating protein as a key mediator of ephrin/Eph signaling.
...
PMID:Rac-GAP alpha-chimerin regulates motor-circuit formation as a key mediator of EphrinB3/EphA4 forward signaling. 1771 50
Neuronal network formation in the developing nervous system is dependent on the accurate navigation of nerve cell axons and dendrites, which is controlled by attractive and repulsive guidance cues. Ephrins and their cognate Eph receptors mediate many repulsive axonal guidance decisions by intercellular interactions resulting in growth cone
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and axon retraction of the Eph-presenting neuron. We show that the Rac-specific GTPase-activating protein alpha2-chimaerin binds activated
EphA4
and mediates
EphA4
-triggered axonal growth cone
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. alpha-Chimaerin mutant mice display a phenotype similar to that of
EphA4
mutant mice, including aberrant midline axon guidance and defective spinal cord central pattern generator activity. Our results reveal an alpha-chimaerin-dependent signaling pathway downstream of
EphA4
, which is essential for axon guidance decisions and neuronal circuit formation in vivo.
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PMID:EphA4-dependent axon guidance is mediated by the RacGAP alpha2-chimaerin. 1778 74
The assembly of neuronal networks during development requires tightly controlled cell-cell interactions. Multiple cell surface receptors that control axon guidance and synapse maturation have been identified. However, the signaling mechanisms downstream of these receptors have remained unclear. Receptor signals might be transmitted through dedicated signaling lines defined by specific effector proteins. Alternatively, a single cell surface receptor might couple to multiple effectors with overlapping functions. We identified the neuronal RacGAP alpha2-chimaerin as an effector for the receptor tyrosine kinase
EphA4
. alpha2-Chimaerin interacts with activated
EphA4
and is required for ephrin-induced growth cone
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in cortical neurons. alpha2-Chimaerin mutant mice exhibit a rabbit-like hopping gait with synchronous hindlimb movements that phenocopies mice lacking
EphA4
kinase activity. Anatomical and functional analyses of corticospinal and spinal interneuron projections reveal that loss of alpha2-chimaerin results in impairment of
EphA4
signaling in vivo. These findings identify alpha2-chimaerin as an indispensable effector for
EphA4
in cortical and spinal motor circuits.
...
PMID:alpha2-Chimaerin is an essential EphA4 effector in the assembly of neuronal locomotor circuits. 1778 74
EphA4
-dependent growth cone
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requires reorganization of actin cytoskeleton through coordinated activation of Rho family GTPases. Whereas various guanine exchange factors have recently been identified to be involved in
EphA4
-mediated regulation of Rho GTPases and growth cone
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, the functional roles of GTPase-activating proteins in the process are largely unknown. Here we report that
EphA4
interacts with alpha2-chimaerin through its Src homology 2 domain. Activated
EphA4
induces a rapid increase of tyrosine phosphorylation of alpha2-chimaerin and enhances its GTPase-activating protein activity toward Rac1. More importantly, alpha2-chimaerin regulates the action of
EphA4
in growth cone
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through modulation of Rac1 activity. Our findings have therefore identified a new alpha2-chimaerin-dependent signaling mechanism through which
EphA4
transduces its signals to the actin cytoskeleton and modulates growth cone morphology.
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PMID:Alpha2-chimaerin interacts with EphA4 and regulates EphA4-dependent growth cone collapse. 1791 Dec 52
Eph receptors play critical roles in the establishment and remodeling of neuronal connections, but the signaling pathways involved are not fully understood. We have identified a novel interaction between the C terminus of the
EphA4
receptor and the PDZ domain of the GTPase-activating protein spine-associated RapGAP (SPAR). In neuronal cells, this binding mediates
EphA4
-dependent inactivation of the closely related GTPases Rap1 and Rap2, which have recently been implicated in the regulation of dendritic spine morphology and synaptic plasticity. We show that SPAR-mediated inactivation of Rap1, but not Rap2, is critical for ephrin-A-dependent growth cone
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in hippocampal neurons and decreased integrin-mediated adhesion in neuronal cells. Distinctive effects of constitutively active Rap1 and Rap2 on the morphology of growth cones and dendritic spines support the idea that these two GTPases have different functions in neurons. Together, our data implicate SPAR as an important signaling intermediate that links the
EphA4
receptor with Rap GTPase function in the regulation of neuronal morphology.
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PMID:The EphA4 receptor regulates neuronal morphology through SPAR-mediated inactivation of Rap GTPases. 1809 60
The erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular (Eph) family of receptor tyrosine kinases regulates a multitude of physiological and pathological processes. Despite the numerous possible research and therapeutic applications of agents capable of modulating Eph receptor function, no small molecule inhibitors targeting the extracellular domain of these receptors have been identified. We have performed a high throughput screen to search for small molecules that inhibit ligand binding to the extracellular domain of the
EphA4
receptor. This yielded a 2,5-dimethylpyrrolyl benzoic acid derivative able to inhibit the interaction of
EphA4
with a peptide ligand as well as the natural ephrin ligands. Evaluation of a series of analogs identified an isomer with similar inhibitory properties and other less potent compounds. The two isomeric compounds act as competitive inhibitors, suggesting that they target the high affinity ligand-binding pocket of
EphA4
and inhibit ephrin-A5 binding to
EphA4
with K(i) values of 7 and 9 mum in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Interestingly, despite the ability of each ephrin ligand to promiscuously bind many Eph receptors, the two compounds selectively target
EphA4
and the closely related EphA2 receptor. The compounds also inhibit ephrin-induced phosphorylation of
EphA4
and EphA2 in cells, without affecting cell viability or the phosphorylation of other receptor tyrosine kinases. Furthermore, the compounds inhibit
EphA4
-mediated growth cone
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in retinal explants and EphA2-dependent retraction of the cell periphery in prostate cancer cells. These data demonstrate that the Eph receptor-ephrin interface can be targeted by inhibitory small molecules and suggest that the two compounds identified will be useful to discriminate the activities of
EphA4
and EphA2 from those of other co-expressed Eph receptors that are activated by the same ephrin ligands. Furthermore, the newly identified inhibitors represent possible leads for the development of therapies to treat pathologies in which
EphA4
and EphA2 are involved, including nerve injuries and cancer.
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PMID:Small molecules can selectively inhibit ephrin binding to the EphA4 and EphA2 receptors. 1872 10
EphA4
null mice have impaired astrocytic gliosis following spinal cord injury. This may be because of altered cytoskeletal regulation and is examined herein using cultured astrocytes from wildtype and
EphA4
null mice. Under basal conditions
EphA4
null astrocytes appeared relatively normal but following stimuli resulting in cytoskeletal rearrangement,
EphA4
null cells responded more slowly. When F-actin stress fibers were collapsed using the Rho kinase inhibitor HA1077, fewer
EphA4
null cells showed stress fiber
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in response to HA1077 and recovered stress fibers more slowly following HA1077 removal.
EphA4
null astrocytes were less adherent and had smaller focal adhesions, while activation of Eph receptors with ephrin-A5-Fc increased the numbers of focal adhesions in both wildtype and knockout astrocytes following serum starvation. Using scratch wound assays,
EphA4
null astrocytes invading the scratch showed impaired glial fibrillary acidic protein expression, particularly in proliferative cells. Astrocytes did not express Ephexin, a major Eph-interacting Rho guanine exchange factor, but they expressed Vav proteins, with lower levels of phospho-Vav in
EphA4
null compared to wildtype astrocytes. This may contribute to the slower cytoskeletal responses generally observed in the
EphA4
null astrocytes. Eph receptor signaling therefore regulates astrocyte reactivity through modulation of cytoskeletal responses.
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PMID:Eph receptor tyrosine kinases regulate astrocyte cytoskeletal rearrangement and focal adhesion formation. 2020 79
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