4.4 Article

Wingless/Wnt signal transduction requires distinct initiation and amplification steps that both depend on Arrow/LRP

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 306, Issue 1, Pages 94-111

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2007.03.005

Keywords

Wnt signaling; wingless; arrow; LRP; frizzled; axin; signal amplification; morphogen gradient

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM045747-09S1, P01 GM067166-04, R01 GM067029, R01 GM067029-04, R01 GM067029-02, GM67029, P01 GM067166-03, R01 GM045747-10A1, P01 GM067166-05, P01-GM067166, R01 GM067029-03, P01 GM067166-02, R01 GM067029-01, P01 GM067166, R01 GM045747-09, GM045747, P01 GM067166-01, R01 GM045747, R01 GM067029-05] Funding Source: Medline

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Members of the Wg/Wnt family provide key intercellular signals during embryonic development and in the maintenance of homeostatic processes, but critical aspects of their signal transduction pathways remain controversial. We have found that canonical Wg signaling in Drosophila involves distinct initiation and amplification steps, both of which require Arrow/LRP. Expressing a chimeric Frizzled2-Arrow protein in flies that lack endogenous Wg or Arrow showed that this construct functions as an activated Wg receptor but is deficient in signal amplification. In contrast, a chimeric Arrow protein containing the dimerization domain of Torso acted as a potent amplifier of Wg signaling but could not initiate Wg signaling on its own. The two chimeric proteins synergized, so that their co-expression largely reconstituted the signaling levels achieved by expressing Wg itself The amplification function of Arrow/LRP appears to be particularly important for long-range signaling, and may reflect a general mechanism for potentiating signals in the shallow part of a morphogen gradient. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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