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  • Cell-cycle-dependent TGFβ-BMP antagonism regulates neural tube closure by modulating tight junctions.

Cell-cycle-dependent TGFβ-BMP antagonism regulates neural tube closure by modulating tight junctions.

Journal of cell science (2016-04-02)
Smita Amarnath, Seema Agarwala
ABSTRACT

Many organs form by invaginating and rolling flat epithelial cell sheets into tubes. Invagination of the ventral midline of the neural plate forms the median hinge point (MHP), an event that elevates the neural folds and is essential for neural tube closure (NTC). MHP formation involves dynamic spatiotemporal modulations of cell shape, but how these are achieved is not understood. Here, we show that cell-cycle-dependent BMP and TGFβ antagonism elicits MHP formation by dynamically regulating interactions between apical (PAR complex) and basolateral (LGL) polarity proteins. TGFβ and BMP-activated receptor (r)-SMADs [phosphorylated SMAD2 or SMAD3 (pSMAD2,3), or phosphorylated SMAD1, SMAD5 or SMAD8 (pSMAD1,5,8)] undergo cell-cycle-dependent modulations and nucleo-cytosolic shuttling along the apicobasal axis of the neural plate. Non-canonical TGFβ and BMP activity in the cytosol determines whether pSMAD2,3 or pSMAD1,5,8 associates with the tight junction (PAR complex) or with LGL, and whether cell shape changes can occur at the MHP. Thus, the interactions of BMP and TGFβ with polarity proteins dynamically modulate MHP formation by regulating r-SMAD competition for tight junctions and r-SMAD sequestration by LGL.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-SMAD1 Antibody, clone AS22, clone AS22, from mouse
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Partitioning-defective 3 Antibody, Upstate®, from rabbit
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-α-Tubulin antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone B-5-1-2, purified from hybridoma cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-phospho-Histone H3 (Thr3) Antibody, Upstate®, from rabbit