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Article Dans Une Revue Neurochemical Research Année : 2013

NCAM function in the adult brain: lessons from mimetic peptides and therapeutic potential.

Résumé

Neural cell adhesion molecules (NCAMs) are complexes of transmembranal proteins critical for cell-cell interactions. Initially recognized as key players in the orchestration of developmental processes involving cell migration, cell survival, axon guidance, and synaptic targeting, they have been shown to retain these functions in the mature adult brain, in relation to plastic processes and cognitive abilities. NCAMs are able to interact among themselves (homophilic binding) as well as with other molecules (heterophilic binding). Furthermore, they are the sole molecule of the central nervous system undergoing polysialylation. Most interestingly polysialylated and non-polysialylated NCAMs display opposite properties. The precise contributions each of these characteristics brings in the regulations of synaptic and cellular plasticity in relation to cognitive processes in the adult brain are not yet fully understood. With the aim of deciphering the specific involvement of each interaction, recent developments led to the generation of NCAM mimetic peptides that recapitulate identified binding properties of NCAM. The present review focuses on the information such advances have provided in the understanding of NCAM contribution to cognitive function.

Dates et versions

hal-01183294 , version 1 (07-08-2015)

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Glenn Dallérac, Claire Rampon, Valérie Doyère. NCAM function in the adult brain: lessons from mimetic peptides and therapeutic potential.. Neurochemical Research, 2013, 38 (6), pp.1163-73. ⟨10.1007/s11064-013-1007-2⟩. ⟨hal-01183294⟩
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