Publication | Open Access
Integrated β-catenin, BMP, PTEN, and Notch signalling patterns the nephron
133
Citations
68
References
2015
Year
Environmental SignalingMolecular BiologyWater HomeostasisOrgan DevelopmentCellular PhysiologySignaling PathwayKidney BalanceNotch SignallingKidney Tubule RemodelingCell SignalingMolecular SignalingMolecular PhysiologyMedicineMorphogenesisOrganogenesisCell BiologySignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyCell Fate DeterminationSystems BiologyCell PolarityCell DevelopmentKidney ResearchPi3k Signalling
The different segments of the nephron and glomerulus in the kidney balance the processes of water homeostasis, solute recovery, blood filtration, and metabolite excretion. When segment function is disrupted, a range of pathological features are presented. Little is known about nephron patterning during embryogenesis. In this study, we demonstrate that the early nephron is patterned by a gradient in β-catenin activity along the axis of the nephron tubule. By modifying β-catenin activity, we force cells within nephrons to differentiate according to the imposed β-catenin activity level, thereby causing spatial shifts in nephron segments. The β-catenin signalling gradient interacts with the BMP pathway which, through PTEN/PI3K/AKT signalling, antagonises β-catenin activity and promotes segment identities associated with low β-catenin activity. β-catenin activity and PI3K signalling also integrate with Notch signalling to control segmentation: modulating β-catenin activity or PI3K rescues segment identities normally lost by inhibition of Notch. Our data therefore identifies a molecular network for nephron patterning.
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