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SMOC-1 interacts with both BMP and glypican to regulate BMP signaling in C. elegans. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Secreted modular calcium-binding proteins (SMOCs) are evolutionary conserved proteins present in various organisms, including humans and worms, characterized by their calcium-binding and thyroglobulin domains.
  • In C. elegans, the sole SMOC protein (CeSMOC-1) was shown to bind to the proteoglycan LON-2/glypican and the BMP homolog DBL-1, suggesting a complex interaction that influences BMP signaling pathways.
  • The study revealed that CeSMOC-1 has dual regulatory roles: it negatively impacts BMP signaling through LON-2 and positively influences it via DBL-1, contributing to our understanding of SMOC protein functions in cellular signaling.

Article Abstract

Secreted modular calcium-binding proteins (SMOCs) are conserved matricellular proteins found in organisms from Caenorhabditis elegans to humans. SMOC homologs characteristically contain 1 or 2 extracellular calcium-binding (EC) domain(s) and 1 or 2 thyroglobulin type-1 (TY) domain(s). SMOC proteins in Drosophila and Xenopus have been found to interact with cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) to exert both positive and negative influences on the conserved bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling pathway. In this study, we used a combination of biochemical, structural modeling, and molecular genetic approaches to dissect the functions of the sole SMOC protein in C. elegans. We showed that CeSMOC-1 binds to the heparin sulfate proteoglycan GPC3 homolog LON-2/glypican, as well as the mature domain of the BMP2/4 homolog DBL-1. Moreover, CeSMOC-1 can simultaneously bind LON-2/glypican and DBL-1/BMP. The interaction between CeSMOC-1 and LON-2/glypican is mediated specifically by the EC domain of CeSMOC-1, while the full interaction between CeSMOC-1 and DBL-1/BMP requires full-length CeSMOC-1. We provide both in vitro biochemical and in vivo functional evidence demonstrating that CeSMOC-1 functions both negatively in a LON-2/glypican-dependent manner and positively in a DBL-1/BMP-dependent manner to regulate BMP signaling. We further showed that in silico, Drosophila and vertebrate SMOC proteins can also bind to mature BMP dimers. Our work provides a mechanistic basis for how the evolutionarily conserved SMOC proteins regulate BMP signaling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10464977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002272DOI Listing

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