4.8 Article

Surrogate Wnt agonists that phenocopy canonical Wnt and β-catenin signalling

Journal

NATURE
Volume 545, Issue 7653, Pages 234-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature22306

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 GM097015, K08DK096048, U01 DK085527, U19 AI116484, U01 CA176299]
  2. DFG [SFB 944]
  3. Bu,rroughs Wellcome Fund CAMS
  4. Stinehart/Reed Foundation
  5. Ludwig Foundation
  6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  7. European Union [668294]
  8. NWO translational Adult Stem Cell Research grant [40-41400-98-1108]

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Wnt proteins modulate cell proliferation and differentiation and the self-renewal of stem cells by inducing beta-catenin-dependent signalling through the Wnt receptor frizzled (FZD) and the co-receptors LRP5 and LRP6 to regulate cell fate decisions and the growth and repair of several tissues(1). The 19 mammalian Wnt proteins are cross-reactive with the 10 FZD receptors, and this has complicated the attribution of distinct biological functions to specific FZD and Wnt subtype interactions. Furthermore, Wnt proteins are modified post-translationally by palmitoylation, which is essential for their secretion, function and interaction with FZD receptors(2-4). As a result of their acylation, Wnt proteins are very hydrophobic and require detergents for purification, which presents major obstacles to the preparation and application of recombinant Wnt proteins. This hydrophobicity has hindered the determination of the molecular mechanisms of Wnt signalling activation and the functional importance of FZD subtypes, and the use of Wnt proteins as therapeutic agents. Here we develop surrogate Wnt agonists, water-soluble FZD-LRP5/LRP6 heterodimerizers, with FZD5/FZD8-specific and broadly FZD-reactive binding domains. Similar to WNT3A, these Wnt agonists elicit a characteristic beta-catenin signalling response in a FZD-selective fashion, enhance the osteogenic lineage commitment of primary mouse and human mesenchymal stem cells, and support the growth of a broad range of primary human organoid cultures. In addition, the surrogates can be systemically expressed and exhibit Wnt activity in vivo in the mouse liver, regulating metabolic liver zonation and promoting hepatocyte proliferation, resulting in hepatomegaly. These surrogates demonstrate that canonical Wnt signalling can be activated by bi-specific ligands that induce receptor heterodimerization. Furthermore, these easily produced, non-lipidated Wnt surrogate agonists facilitate functional studies of Wnt signalling and the exploration of Wnt agonists for translational applications in regenerative medicine.

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