Junctional adhesion molecule-A: functional diversity through molecular promiscuity |
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Authors: | Tim Steinbacher Daniel Kummer Klaus Ebnet |
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Affiliation: | 1.Institute-Associated Research Group: Cell Adhesion and Cell Polarity, Institute of Medical Biochemistry, ZMBE,University of Münster,Münster,Germany;2.Cells-In-Motion Cluster of Excellence (EXC1003-CiM),University of Münster,Münster,Germany;3.Interdisciplinary Clinical Research Center (IZKF),University of Münster,Münster,Germany |
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Abstract: | Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) of the immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) regulate important processes such as cell proliferation, differentiation and morphogenesis. This activity is primarily due to their ability to initiate intracellular signaling cascades at cell–cell contact sites. Junctional adhesion molecule-A (JAM-A) is an IgSF-CAM with a short cytoplasmic tail that has no catalytic activity. Nevertheless, JAM-A is involved in a variety of biological processes. The functional diversity of JAM-A resides to a large part in a C-terminal PDZ domain binding motif which directly interacts with nine different PDZ domain-containing proteins. The molecular promiscuity of its PDZ domain motif allows JAM-A to recruit protein scaffolds to specific sites of cell–cell adhesion and to assemble signaling complexes at those sites. Here, we review the molecular characteristics of JAM-A, including its dimerization, its interaction with scaffolding proteins, and the phosphorylation of its cytoplasmic domain, and we describe how these characteristics translate into diverse biological activities. |
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