Plexin is a family of transmembrane proteins the extracellular segment of which posesses three repeats of a cysteine-rich domain similar to the domain found in the c-Met proto-oncogene protein product. Xenopus plexin has the Ca ++ -dependent homophilic cell adhesion activity. In mice, each member of plexin is expressed in a distinct subset of neurons, suggesting the possibility that plexins play roles in the formation of particular neural circuits. Recently, it was shown that a Drosophila plexin is a receptor for a member of semaphorin, and mutations in the plexin gene and the semaphorin gene cause similar morphological defects in the nervous system. To examine the function of plexin further, we have been analyzing plexin genes in C.elegans . By blast search we have identified two plexin genes in C.elegans , which we tentatively named
cep-1 and
cep-2 .
cep-1 is on cosmid K04B12, which is mapped to the right arm of chromosome II, and
cep-2 is on YAC Y55F3 mapped to the left arm of chromosome IV. A sequence analysis of cDNAs revealed that the
cep-1 gene consists of 16 exons. The predicted sequence of CEP-1 bears homology of around 20% to vertebrate plexins. An expression analysis by using GFP showed that
cep-2 appears to be expressed in neurons. The similarity in the structure and the expression pattern of vertebrate and C.elegans plexins might reflect conserved functions of this class of proteins.