Shapiro_2007_Annu.Rev.Neurosci_30_451

Reference

Title : Adhesion molecules in the nervous system: structural insights into function and diversity - Shapiro_2007_Annu.Rev.Neurosci_30_451
Author(s) : Shapiro L , Love J , Colman DR
Ref : Annual Review of Neuroscience , 30 :451 , 2007
Abstract :

The unparalleled complexity of intercellular connections in the nervous system presents requirements for high levels of both specificity and diversity for the proteins that mediate cell adhesion. Here we describe recent advances toward understanding the molecular mechanisms that underlie adhesive binding, specificity, and diversity for several well-characterized families of adhesion molecules in the nervous system. Although many families of adhesion proteins, including cadherins and immunoglobulin superfamily members, are utilized in neural and nonneural contexts, nervous system-specific diversification mechanisms, such as precisely regulated alternative splicing, provide an important means to enable their function in the complex context of the nervous system.

PubMedSearch : Shapiro_2007_Annu.Rev.Neurosci_30_451
PubMedID: 17600523
Gene_locus related to this paper: human-NLGN3 , human-NLGN4X

Citations formats

Shapiro L, Love J, Colman DR (2007)
Adhesion molecules in the nervous system: structural insights into function and diversity
Annual Review of Neuroscience 30 :451

Shapiro L, Love J, Colman DR (2007)
Annual Review of Neuroscience 30 :451