| Literature DB >> 22752156 |
SongTing Shi1, David J J de Gorter, Willem M H Hoogaars, Peter A C 't Hoen, Peter ten Dijke.
Abstract
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are important extracellular cytokines that play critical roles in embryogenesis and tissue homeostasis. BMPs signal via transmembrane type I and type II serine/threonine kinase receptors and intracellular Smad effector proteins. BMP signaling is precisely regulated and perturbation of BMP signaling is connected to multiple diseases, including musculoskeletal diseases. In this review, we will summarize the recent progress in elucidation of BMP signal transduction, how overactive BMP signaling is involved in the pathogenesis of heterotopic ossification and Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and discuss possible therapeutic strategies for treatment of these diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22752156 PMCID: PMC3541930 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-012-1054-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Osteo-inductive BMPs and its mouse mutant
| BMP | Tissue expression | Knockout mice phenotype | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| BMP2 | Heart, limb, teeth, muscle | Embryonic lethal, defect in heart development. Conditional knock out in limb showed that BMP2 is dispensable for skeleton formation, but required for bone fracture repair | [ |
| BMP4 | Teeth, limb, heart, muscle | Embryonic lethal; Little or no mesoderm formation. Conditional knock out of BMP4 showed defects in bone formation | [ |
| BMP5 | Bone, cartilage | Spontaneous mutation, viable, short ear with skeleton defect, Loss of one pair of ribs | [ |
| BMP6 | Liver, heart, bone | BMP6 knockout mice are viable, association with type II diabetes and iron overload | [ |
| BMP7 | Limb, kidney | Die after birth with defects in kidney, eye, and bone | [ |
| BMP8 | Developing skeleton tissue, male germ cells | BMP8a knockout mice showed defects in maintenance of spermatogenesis, mice deficient in BMP8b are sterile | [ |
| BMP9 | Liver | N/A | [ |
| BMP10 | Trabecular myocardium, embryonic and postnatal heart | Embryonic lethal with defects in heart development | [ |
Fig. 1Schematic overview of BMP signaling. Upon formation of heteromeric complex composed of type II and type I receptors and the BMP dimers, FKBP12 is released from the type I receptors and released the phosphorylation site on type I receptor. Next, the type I receptor is phosphorylated by the type II receptor, which propagates the signal into the cells by phosphorylating the C-terminus of R-Smads. The phosphorylated R-Smads form a complex with the Co-Smad and are translocated into nucleus where they in collaboration with other transcription factors to regulate gene expression. The presence of membrane-tethered type III receptors on the membrane can enhance R-Smads phosphorylation. The cells can release the extracellular domain of the type III receptor, which is called the soluble form of type III receptors. The soluble form of type III receptors and other BMP antagonists such as Noggin and Chordin, repress BMP signaling through prohibiting BMP binding to its receptors. I-Smads repress BMP activity either by repressing complex of R-Smads/Co-Smads, or directly inactivate type I receptor activity. In the nucleus, phosphatases represses BMP activity by dephosphorylating R-Smads thereby promoting the exportation of R-Smads. In addition to R-Smads, BMP can also signal via MAPK (non-canonical BMP pathways) through activation of TAK1, which can further activate MAPK. MAPK will be transported into the nucleus, and activate some transcriptional factors, which can further initiate specific gene expression
Fig. 2Diagram illustrating endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (Endo-MT) and its role in the heterotopic bone formation in FOP patients. In the endothelial cells, TGFβ or BMP4 induces expression of transcription factors for mesoderm induction including Snail/Slug/Twist/ZEB-1/Sip-1, and reprogram endothelial cells into multipotent mesoderm cells through Endo-MT transition. The multipotent mesoderm cells can be further differentiated into osteoblasts, chondrocytes, and adipocytes under proper differentiation conditions. The type I receptors ALK2 and ALK5 participate in the process. In FOP patients, the mutant ALK2 can directly induce Endo-MT and convert endothelial cells into multipotent mesoderm cells. Then, under pathogenic inflammatory conditions in FOP patients, the mesoderm cells differentiate into cartilage, which can be further developed into heterotopic bone through endochondral ossification