FGF signaling regulates development by processes beyond canonical pathways.

Genes Dev

Department of Cell, Developmental, and Regenerative Biology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York 10029, USA.

Published: December 2020

FGFs are key developmental regulators that engage a signal transduction cascade through receptor tyrosine kinases, prominently engaging ERK1/2 but also other pathways. However, it remains unknown whether all FGF activities depend on this canonical signal transduction cascade. To address this question, we generated allelic series of knock-in and mouse strains, carrying point mutations that disrupt binding of signaling effectors, and a kinase dead allele of that broadly phenocopies the null mutant. When interrogated in cranial neural crest cells, we identified discrete functions for signaling pathways in specific craniofacial contexts, but point mutations, even when combined, failed to recapitulate the single or double null mutant phenotypes. Furthermore, the signaling mutations abrogated established FGF-induced signal transduction pathways, yet FGF functions such as cell-matrix and cell-cell adhesion remained unaffected, though these activities did require FGFR kinase activity. Our studies establish combinatorial roles of and in development and uncouple novel FGFR kinase-dependent cell adhesion properties from canonical intracellular signaling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7706708PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.342956.120DOI Listing

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