Neural UNC-44 AO13 ankyrin is required for proper axon guidance (Otsuka et al., J. Cell. Biol., 129:1081-1092, 1995; Boontrakulpoontawee and Otsuka, Molec. Genet. Genom., 267:291-302, 2002; Otsuka et al., J. Neurobiol., 50:333-349, 2002). By yeast two-hybrid screening, the carboxyl domain of AO13 ankyrin was found to bind to several proteins, including the +TIP, CLASP2, encoded by
cls-2. The CLASP2-binding site on UNC-44 was narrowed to the EF-hand calcium-binding domain by deletion analysis. Further, the carboxyl terminal domain of CLASP2, which is known in vertebrates to be required for cortical localization, binds to UNC-44. CLASP2 plays multiple roles in cells, including roles in the kinetochore and at the leading edge of migrating and outgrowing cells. In other systems, CLASP2 binds to the plus ends of microtubules at the leading edge of migrating cells, is inhibited by phosphorylation, and is under the control of the PI3-kinase and GSK-3 beta; pathways. In vertebrates, CLASP2 is known to associate with microtubules at the cell cortex, however the adapter molecules remain unknown. In the nematode, UNC-44 may be one the adapters that links CLASP2 to the cell periphery. In C. elegans, affinity-purified CLASP2 antibodies labeled the cytoplasm of many cells and, in some cases, clearly labeled the cell periphery. The interaction between UNC-44 and CLASP2 leads to the hypothesis that UNC-44 may act to capture CLASP-tipped pioneer microtubules that are exploring the limits of growth cone filopodia. This hypothesis is being tested by generating presumptive dominant negative forms of CLASP2 under the control of an inducible promoter.