1. Academic Validation
  2. Homeodomain-mediated beta-catenin-dependent switching events dictate cell-lineage determination

Homeodomain-mediated beta-catenin-dependent switching events dictate cell-lineage determination

  • Cell. 2006 May 5;125(3):593-605. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2006.02.046.
Lorin E Olson 1 Jessica Tollkuhn Claudio Scafoglio Anna Krones Jie Zhang Kenneth A Ohgi Wei Wu Makoto M Taketo Rolf Kemler Rudolf Grosschedl Dave Rose Xue Li Michael G Rosenfeld
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department and School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Abstract

While the biological roles of canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling in development and disease are well documented, understanding the molecular logic underlying the functionally distinct nuclear transcriptional programs mediating the diverse functions of beta-catenin remains a major challenge. Here, we report an unexpected strategy for beta-catenin-dependent regulation of cell-lineage determination based on interactions between beta-catenin and a specific homeodomain factor, Prop1, rather than Lef/Tcfs. beta-catenin acts as a binary switch to simultaneously activate expression of the critical lineage-determining transcription factor, Pit1, and to repress the gene encoding the lineage-inhibiting transcription factor, Hesx1, acting via TLE/Reptin/HDAC1 corepressor complexes. The strategy of functionally distinct actions of a homeodomain factor in response to Wnt signaling is suggested to be prototypic of a widely used mechanism for generating diverse cell types from pluripotent precursor cells in response to common signaling pathways during organogenesis.

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