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Developmental Biology | 1984

Ontogenetic expression of cell adhesion molecules: L-CAM is found in epithelia derived from the three primary germ layers☆

Jean Paul Thiery; Annie Delouvée; W J Gallin; Bruce A. Cunningham; Gerald M. Edelman

Immunofluorescence techniques using specific antibodies against the liver cell adhesion molecule, L-CAM, were used to explore the appearance of L-CAM during early embryogenesis and organogenesis, as well as in adult tissue. Immunoblots of L-CAM from embryonic and adult organs indicated that molecules detected in each tissue were L-CAM, and that the antibodies were not simply detecting cross-reacting molecules. L-CAM was found in low levels on pregastrulation embryos. During gastrulation, the molecule remained present on ectoderm but was not detected on mesodermal and definitive endodermal cells. During neurulation, L-CAM disappeared from the neural ectoderm, in which staining for the neural cell adhesion molecule, N-CAM, had previously been shown to increase markedly. During organogenesis, L-CAM appeared in all endodermal structures, in ectoderm other than neural derivatives, in placodes, in extraembryonic ectoderm and endoderm, and in some mesodermal structures such as Wolffian ducts, oviduct, and kidney epithelium. Other mesodermal derivatives were not stained and the molecule was not detected in hemangioblastic areas of the lateral plate mesoderm nor in splanchnopleural derivatives such as spleen, adrenal glands, and gonads. During embryonic induction, for example, neurulation and in early kidney development, changes in L-CAM distribution were correlated with both locations and times of induction events. Analysis of distribution in the adult revealed that L-CAM was present in the stratum germinativum of the skin, in endodermally derived epithelia, in the female reproductive tract, and in the kidneys. In several fully differentiated glandular organs, L-CAM staining was restricted to basal or apical parts of the cell surface. When correlated with previous results obtained for N-CAM, these findings support the idea that local cell surface modulation of a small number of cell adhesion molecules may regulate other primary processes of development to yield specific patterns, both in early development and in organogenesis. Reflections of these patterns remain in adult life.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1988

Construction of epithelioid sheets by transfection of mouse sarcoma cells with cDNAs for chicken cell adhesion molecules.

R M Mege; F Matsuzaki; W J Gallin; J I Goldberg; Bruce A. Cunningham; Gerald M. Edelman


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1983

Characterization of L-CAM, a major cell adhesion molecule from embryonic liver cells

W J Gallin; Gerald M. Edelman; Bruce A. Cunningham


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1983

Early epochal maps of two different cell adhesion molecules.

Gerald M. Edelman; W J Gallin; A Delouvée; Bruce A. Cunningham; Jean Paul Thiery


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1987

Sequence analysis of a cDNA clone encoding the liver cell adhesion molecule, L-CAM

W J Gallin; Barbara C. Sorkin; Gerald M. Edelman; Bruce A. Cunningham


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1987

Cellular expression of liver and neural cell adhesion molecules after transfection with their cDNAs results in specific cell-cell binding.

Gerald M. Edelman; Ben A. Murray; R M Mege; Bruce A. Cunningham; W J Gallin


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1986

Antibodies to liver cell adhesion molecule perturb inductive interactions and alter feather pattern and structure

W J Gallin; Cheng-Ming Chuong; L H Finkel; Gerald M. Edelman


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1984

Linear organization of the liver cell adhesion molecule L-CAM

Bruce A. Cunningham; Y Leutzinger; W J Gallin; Barbara C. Sorkin; Gerald M. Edelman


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1983

Structure and Modulation of Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules in Early and Late Embryogenesis

Gerald M. Edelman; Stanley Hoffman; Cheng-Ming Chuong; J.-P. Thiery; R Brackenbury; W J Gallin; Martin Grumet; Michael E. Greenberg; J.J. Hemperly; C. Cohen; B.A. Cunningham


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1984

Isolation of cDNA clones for the chicken neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM)

Ben A. Murray; John J. Hemperly; W J Gallin; J S MacGregor; Gerald M. Edelman; Bruce A. Cunningham

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Gerald M. Edelman

The Neurosciences Institute

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Cheng-Ming Chuong

University of Southern California

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Leif H. Finkel

University of Pennsylvania

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