Expression of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan glypican-1 in the developing rodent

Developmental Dynamics : an Official Publication of the American Association of Anatomists
E D LitwackA D Lander

Abstract

The glypicans are a family of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteoglycans that, by virtue of their cell-surface localization and possession of heparan sulfate chains, may regulate the responses of cells to numerous heparin-binding growth factors, cell adhesion molecules, and extracellular matrix components. Mutations in one glypican cause a syndrome of human birth defects, suggesting important roles for these proteoglycans in development. Glypican-1, the first-discovered member of this family, was originally found in cultured fibroblasts, and later shown to be a major proteoglycan of the mature and developing brain. Here we examine the pattern of glypican-1 mRNA and protein expression more widely in the developing rodent, concentrating on late embryonic and early postnatal stages. High levels of glypican-1 expression were found throughout the brain and skeletal system. In the brain, glypican-1 mRNA was widely, and sometimes only transiently, expressed by zones of neurons and neuroepithelia. Glypican-1 protein localized strongly to axons and, in the adult, to synaptic terminal fields as well. In the developing skeletal system, glypican-1 was found in the periosteum and bony trabeculae in a pattern consistent with e...Continue Reading

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