| Literature DB >> 23153497 |
Tony Oosterveen1, Sanja Kurdija, Zhanna Alekseenko, Christopher W Uhde, Maria Bergsland, Magnus Sandberg, Elisabet Andersson, José M Dias, Jonas Muhr, Johan Ericson.
Abstract
Morphogens orchestrate tissue patterning in a concentration-dependent fashion during vertebrate embryogenesis, yet little is known of how positional information provided by such signals is translated into discrete transcriptional outputs. Here we have identified and characterized cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) of genes operating downstream of graded Shh signaling and bifunctional Gli proteins in neural patterning. Unexpectedly, we find that Gli activators have a noninstructive role in long-range patterning and cooperate with SoxB1 proteins to facilitate a largely concentration-independent mode of gene activation. Instead, the opposing Gli-repressor gradient is interpreted at transcriptional levels, and, together with CRM-specific repressive input of homeodomain proteins, comprises a repressive network that translates graded Shh signaling into regional gene expression patterns. Moreover, local and long-range interpretation of Shh signaling differs with respect to CRM context sensitivity and Gli-activator dependence, and we propose that these differences provide insight into how morphogen function may have mechanistically evolved from an initially binary inductive event.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23153497 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2012.09.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270