Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Nature. 1993 Oct 14;365(6447):644-9.

    The daf-4 gene encodes a bone morphogenetic protein receptor controlling C. elegans dauer larva development.

    Estevez M, Attisano L, Wrana JL, Albert PS, Massagué J, Riddle DL.

    Molecular Biology Program, University of Missouri, Columbia 65211.

    The bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) family is a conserved group of signalling molecules within the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) superfamily. This group, including the Drosophila decapentaplegic (dpp) protein and the mammalian BMPs, mediates cellular interactions and tissue differentiation during development. Here we show that a homologue of human BMPs controls a developmental switch in the life cycle of the free-living soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Starvation and overcrowding induce C. elegans to form a developmentally arrested, third-stage dauer larva. The daf-4 gene, which acts to inhibit dauer larva formation and promote growth, encodes a receptor protein kinase similar to the daf-1, activin and TGF-beta receptor serine/threonine kinases. When expressed in monkey COS cells, the daf-4 receptor binds human BMP-2 and BMP-4. The daf-4 receptor is the first to be identified for any growth factor in the BMP family.

    PMID: 8413626 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read