| Literature DB >> 26013826 |
Guanni Sun1, Zhirui Hu2, Zheying Min3, Xiaohua Yan4, Zhenpo Guan1, Hanxia Su1, Yu Fu1, Xiaopeng Ma2, Ye-Guang Chen4, Michael Q Zhang5, Qinghua Tao6, Wei Wu7.
Abstract
Germ layer induction is one of the earliest events shortly after fertilization that initiates body formation of vertebrate embryos. In Xenopus, the maternally deposited transcriptional factor VegT promotes the expression of zygotic Nodal/Activin ligands that further form a morphogen gradient along the vegetal-animal axis and trigger the induction of the three germ layers. Here we found that SCP3 (small C-terminal domain phosphatase 3) is maternally expressed and vegetally enriched in Xenopus embryos and is essential for the timely induction of germ layers. SCP3 is required for the full activation of Nodal/Activin and bone morphogenetic protein signals and functions via dephosphorylation in the linker regions of receptor-regulated Smads. Consistently, the linker regions of receptor-regulated Smads are heavily phosphorylated in fertilized eggs, and this phosphorylation is gradually removed when embryos approach the midblastula transition. Knockdown of maternal SCP3 attenuates these dephosphorylation events and the activation of Nodal/Activin and bone morphogenetic protein signals after midblastula transition. This study thus suggested that the maternal SCP3 serves as a vegetally enriched, intrinsic factor to ensure a prepared status of Smads for their activation by the upcoming ligands during germ layer induction of Xenopus embryos.Entities:
Keywords: SCP3; SMAD transcription factor; Xenopus; embryo; germ layer induction; phosphatase; transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta)
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26013826 PMCID: PMC4498063 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.655605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157