NOVEL LIPID MODIFICATIONS OF SECRETED PROTEIN SIGNALS
Secreted signaling proteins function in a diverse array of essential patterning events during metazoan development, ranging from embryonic segmentation in insects to neural tube differentiation in vertebrates. These proteins generally are expressed in a localized manner, and they may elicit distinct...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of biochemistry 2004-01, Vol.73 (1), p.891-923 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Secreted signaling proteins function in a diverse array of essential
patterning events during metazoan development, ranging from embryonic
segmentation in insects to neural tube differentiation in vertebrates. These
proteins generally are expressed in a localized manner, and they may elicit
distinct concentration-dependent responses in the cells of surrounding tissues
and structures, thus functioning as morphogens that specify the pattern of
cellular responses by their tissue distribution. Given the importance of signal
distribution, it is notable that the Hedgehog (Hh) and Wnt proteins, two of the
most important families of such signals, are known to be covalently modified by
lipid moieties, the membrane-anchoring properties of which are not consistent
with passive models of protein mobilization within tissues. This review focuses
on the mechanisms underlying biogenesis of the mature Hh proteins, which are
dually modified by cholesteryl and palmitoyl adducts, as well as on the
relationship between Hh proteins and the self-splicing proteins (i.e., proteins
containing inteins) and the Hh-like proteins of nematodes. We further discuss
the cellular mechanisms that have evolved to handle lipidated Hh proteins in
the spatial deployment of the signal in developing tissues and the more recent
findings that implicate palmitate modification as an important feature of Wnt
signaling proteins. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4154 1545-4509 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.biochem.73.011303.073933 |