4.8 Article

R-spondins are BMP receptor antagonists in Xenopus early embryonic development

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19373-w

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [SFB1324, 331351713]
  2. NXR [RRID: SCR_013731]
  3. Xenbase [RRID: SCR_004337]

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BMP signaling plays key roles in development, stem cells, adult tissue homeostasis, and disease. How BMP receptors are extracellularly modulated and in which physiological context, is therefore of prime importance. R-spondins (RSPOs) are a small family of secreted proteins that co-activate WNT signaling and function as potent stem cell effectors and oncogenes. Evidence is mounting that RSPOs act WNT-independently but how and in which physiological processes remains enigmatic. Here we show that RSPO2 and RSPO3 also act as BMP antagonists. RSPO2 is a high affinity ligand for the type I BMP receptor BMPR1A/ALK3, and it engages ZNRF3 to trigger internalization and degradation of BMPR1A. In early Xenopus embryos, Rspo2 is a negative feedback inhibitor in the BMP4 synexpression group and regulates dorsoventral axis formation. We conclude that R-spondins are bifunctional ligands, which activate WNT- and inhibit BMP signaling via ZNRF3, with implications for development and cancer. R-spondins are known modulators of Wnt signaling. Here, the authors demonstrate that R-spondins function in Xenopus embryonic development as BMP antagonists by targeting BMP receptor 1A for degradation.

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