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Cytoplasmically anchored plakoglobin induces a WNT-like phenotype in Xenopus


Cytoplasmically anchored plakoglobin induces a WNT-like phenotype in Xenopus.

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Plakoglobin is one of two vertebrate proteins closely related to the Drosophila segment polarity gene product armadillo. Overexpression of plakoglobin induces neural axis duplication in Xenopus and the exogenous plakoglobin is localized to nuclei (Karnovsky, A., and Klymkowsky, M. W., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92, 4255, 1995; Rubenstein, A., et al., Dev. Genet., 1997, in press). We have carried out a series of experiments to test whether the nuclear localization of plakoglobin is required for its inductive effects. Prior to the midblastula transition exogenous plakoglobin is cytoplasmic and concentrated in the cortical regions of blastomeres; after the midblastula transition exogenous plakoglobin accumulates in embryonic nuclei. The addition of a nuclear localization sequence does not change the timing of plakoglobin's nuclear localization, suggesting that it is anchored in the cytoplasm prior to the midblastula transition. Next, we constructed two membrane-anchored forms of plakoglobin. These are exclusively cytoplasmic; yet both were as effective at producing a Wnt-like axis duplication as were free, unfettered forms of plakoglobin. Moreover, expression of anchored plakoglobins had no apparent effect on the cytoplasmic or nuclear levels of beta-catenin. These data indicate that plakoglobin can act cytoplasmically to generate a WNT-like phenotype. Taken together with the ventralizing effects of a mutant from of the XTcf-3 transcription factor, described by Molenaar et al. Cell 86, 391, 1996, we speculate that in the early Xenopus embryo, activation of plakoglobin (or beta-catenin) inhibits the activity of XTcf-3 or a XTcf-3-like factor.


Merriam JM, Rubenstein AB, Klymkowsky MW

Developmental biology

1997-05-01 00:00

185

1

67-81

Amino Acid Sequence,Animals,Biological Transport,Cell Nucleus,Cytoplasm,Cytoskeletal Proteins,Desmoplakins,Drosophila Proteins,Humans,Molecular Sequence Data,Phenotype,Proto-Oncogene Proteins,Signal Transduction,Trans-Activators,Xenopus,Xenopus Proteins,beta Catenin,gamma Catenin,CTNNB1 protein, human,Cytoskeletal Proteins,Desmoplakins,Drosophila Proteins,Proto-Oncogene Proteins,Trans-Activators,Xenopus Proteins,beta Catenin,beta-catenin protein, Xenopus,gamma Catenin,wingless protein, Drosophila

University of Colorado, Boulder 80309-0347, USA

Dev. Biol.

NIGMS GM54001

0012-1606

10.1006/dbio.1997.8550

S0012-1606(97)98550-X

614

True

9169051

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