Sef is a negative regulator of fiber cell differentiation in the ocular lens

Male 0303 health sciences Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction Blotting, Western Membrane Proteins Apoptosis Cell Differentiation Epithelial Cells Mice, Transgenic Embryo, Mammalian Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor Fibroblast Growth Factors Mice 03 medical and health sciences Lens, Crystalline In Situ Nick-End Labeling Animals Humans Microphthalmos Female RNA, Messenger Promoter Regions, Genetic
DOI: 10.1016/j.diff.2010.05.005 Publication Date: 2010-06-10T08:51:05Z
ABSTRACT
Growth factor signaling, mediated via receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), needs to be tightly regulated in many developmental systems to ensure a physiologically appropriate biological outcome. At one level this regulation may involve spatially and temporally ordered patterns of expression of specific RTK signaling antagonists, such as Sef (similar expression to fgfs). Growth factors, notably FGFs, play important roles in development of the vertebrate ocular lens. FGF induces lens cell proliferation and differentiation at progressively higher concentrations and there is compelling evidence that a gradient of FGF signaling in the eye determines lens polarity and growth patterns. We have recently identified the presence of Sef in the lens, with strongest expression in the epithelial cells. Given the important role for FGFs in lens developmental biology, we employed transgenic mouse strategies to determine if Sef could be involved in regulating lens cell behaviour. Over-expressing Sef specifically in the lens of transgenic mice led to impaired lens and eye development that resulted in microphthalmia. Sef inhibited primary lens fiber cell elongation and differentiation, as well as increased apoptosis, consistent with a block in FGFR-mediated signaling during lens morphogenesis. These results are consistent with growth factor antagonists, such as Sef, being important negative regulators of growth factor signaling. Moreover, the lens provides a useful paradigm as to how opposing gradients of a growth factor and its antagonist could work together to determine and stabilise tissue patterning during development and growth.
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