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First published online 7 February 2007
doi: 10.1242/dev.000166
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Primer |
Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine and Department of Pediatrics, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
e-mail: mshen{at}cabm.rutgers.edu
SUMMARY
Nodal-related ligands of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGFß) superfamily play central roles in patterning the early embryo during the induction of mesoderm and endoderm and the specification of left-right asymmetry. Additional roles for this pathway in the maintenance of embryonic stem cell pluripotency and in carcinogenesis have been uncovered more recently. Consistent with its crucial developmental functions, Nodal signaling is tightly regulated by diverse mechanisms including the control of ligand processing, utilization of co-receptors, expression of soluble antagonists, as well as positive- and negative-feedback activities.
Introduction
The Nodal signaling pathway is integral to processes of pattern formation and differentiation that take place during the pre-gastrulation and gastrulation stages of chordate development. In particular, Nodal signaling is essential for the specification of the primary body axes, as well as for the formation of mesoderm and endoderm. Its central importance has been established using molecular genetic studies in the frog, zebrafish, chick and mouse systems, and its functional conservation has been demonstrated in various species. Here, I describe the central components and molecular properties of the Nodal pathway and delineate general mechanisms of its function during embryogenesis, with a focus on recent findings.
Key components of the Nodal signaling pathway
Nodal pathway ligands are members of the transforming growth factor-beta
(TGFß) superfamily that bind to type I and type II serine-threonine
kinase receptors, and signal through the Smad2/Smad3 branch of the TGFß
pathway (Schier, 2003
;
Schier and Shen, 2000
;
Whitman, 2001
)
(Table 1). Activated type I
receptors phosphorylate cytoplasmic Smad2 and/or Smad3, leading to their
interaction with Smad4 and the subsequent formation of transcriptional
complexes in the nucleus. Unique to the Nodal pathway are co-receptors of the
EGF-CFC family, which are small cysteine-rich extracellular proteins that are
attached to the plasma membrane through a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)
linkage and are essential for Nodal signaling
(Shen and Schier, 2000
).
Furthermore, Nodal signaling can be antagonized by soluble inhibitors of the
Lefty subclass of TGFß factors (Table
1), and is mediated by FoxH1 and Mixer transcriptional activators
(Fig. 1). Importantly, Nodal
and the TGFß ligand Activin often elicit similar responses in
gain-of-function studies, but differ in that Nodal signaling is
EGF-CFC-dependent and can be blocked by Lefty inhibitors. (In cases in which
Activin and Nodal are likely to have indistinguishable effects, I will refer
to `Activin/Nodal' pathway activity.)
|
Interestingly, recent studies have shown that additional TGFß ligands
can utilize the core components of this pathway and generate Nodal-like
responses in vivo (Chen et al.,
2006
; Cheng et al.,
2003
). One such ligand is Xenopus Vg1, whose role in
mesoderm and endoderm formation has only recently been clarified
(Birsoy et al., 2006
), and
whose conserved functions appear to have been split between its mammalian
counterparts growth differentiation factor 1 (Gdf1) and Gdf3
(Andersson et al., 2006
;
Chen et al., 2006
). Null
mutants for Gdf3 have phenotypes resembling those of mutants of Nodal
pathway components (Chen et al.,
2006
), and double-mutant analyses have revealed partially
overlapping functions of Gdf1 and Nodal
(Andersson et al., 2006
).
Notably, signaling by zebrafish Vg1 (Vtg1) and mouse Gdf1 in microinjected
zebrafish embryos and by Gdf3 in cell culture is EGF-CFC-dependent
(Chen et al., 2006
;
Cheng et al., 2003
); however,
Gdf3 function may be complex, as it can also antagonize BMP signaling
(Levine and Brivanlou, 2006
).
By contrast, the Xenopus TGFß ligand Derrière appears to
signal similarly to Activin, and does not require EGF-CFC co-receptors
(Chen et al., 2006
;
Cheng et al., 2003
).
Although most, or indeed all, of the biological functions of Nodal ligands
could reflect their ability to induce receptor-mediated responses, Nodal
ligands have been shown to heterodimerize with other TGFß superfamily
members, such as Bmp4 and Derrière, to form signaling factors that have
reduced or distinct activities (Eimon and
Harland, 2002
; Yeo and
Whitman, 2001
). Furthermore, Nodal, as well as Gdf3, can
potentially inhibit BMPs as well as Wnt ligands via mechanisms that do not
involve heterodimerization (Haramoto et
al., 2004
; Levine and
Brivanlou, 2006
; Onuma et al.,
2005
). To date, however, there is no definitive evidence
supporting receptor-independent Nodal activity in vivo.
Receptors and co-receptors
Nodal ligands signal through the type I serine-threonine kinase receptor
ALK4 (ActRIB/Acvr1b), together with the type II receptors ActRII (ActRIIA;
Acvr2a) or ActRIIB (Acvr2b) (Reissmann et
al., 2001
; Yan et al.,
2002
; Yeo and Whitman,
2001
). In contrast to Activin, Nodal ligands lack signaling
activity in the absence of EGF-CFC co-receptors, despite their ability to
interact with ALK4-ActRII complexes (Chen
and Shen, 2004
; Reissmann et
al., 2001
; Yeo and Whitman,
2001
). The orphan type I receptor ALK7 (Acvr1c) can also transduce
Nodal signaling activity, potentially in an EGF-CFC-independent manner
(Reissmann et al., 2001
);
however, there is currently no evidence that ALK7 is required for Nodal
pathway activity in vivo (Andersson et al.,
2006
; Jornvall et al.,
2004
).
EGF-CFC proteins are essential co-receptors for Nodal that confer
specificity for the type I receptor ALK4 through protein interactions
(Yan et al., 2002
;
Yeo and Whitman, 2001
).
EGF-CFC genes represent a small family, with two members in mammals
(Cripto and Cryptic), three in frogs (FRL1/XCR1,
XCR2, and XCR3), and a single gene in zebrafish, one-eyed
pinhead (oep) (Dorey and
Hill, 2006
; Shen and Schier,
2000
) (Table 1).
Zebrafish embryos that lack both maternal and zygotic contributions of
oep phenocopy double mutants for the Nodal ligands cyc and
sqt, whereas the expression of Activin, but not Nodal, can rescue the
oep phenotype (Gritsman et al.,
1999
). Notably, oep acts as a cis-acting
permissive factor based on its cell-autonomy in chimeric zebrafish embryos
that are generated by cell transplantation
(Schier et al., 1997
;
Strahle et al., 1997
), as
well as its inability to induce phenotypes when overexpressed
(Zhang et al., 1998
). In
certain contexts, however, EGF-CFC proteins can have distinct properties:
mouse Cripto can act as a secreted trans-acting factor to mediate
Nodal signaling in cell culture and in vivo
(Chu et al., 2005
;
Yan et al., 2002
), whereas
soluble human Cripto protein (TDGFI) can activate the Ras/Raf/MAPK and
PI3K/Akt pathways in a Nodal-independent manner in mammary epithelial cells
(Bianco et al., 2002
;
Bianco et al., 2003
).
Furthermore, a recent study has reported that the non-canonical Wnt ligand
Wnt11 specifies the dorsal-ventral axis in Xenopus embryos through an
interaction with FRL1, leading to the activation of the canonical
Wnt/ß-catenin pathway (Tao et al.,
2005
).
Extracellular inhibitors
Multiple extracellular inhibitors can modulate the activity of Nodal
ligands. The Lefty proteins, which are highly diverged members of the
TGFß superfamily, antagonize Nodal signaling through their interactions
with EGF-CFC proteins as well as Nodal ligands, thereby blocking formation of
receptor complexes (Chen and Shen,
2004
; Cheng et al.,
2004
). By contrast, Lefty proteins have not been found to interact
with ALK4 or ActRIIB, indicating that they do not function as competitive
inhibitors of these receptors (Chen and
Shen, 2004
; Cheng et al.,
2004
). Notably, Lefty genes are often downstream targets of Nodal
signaling, forming an important negative-feedback mechanism for this pathway
(Branford and Yost, 2002
;
Feldman et al., 2002
;
Meno et al., 1999
).
|
Signal transducers and transcriptional regulators
Downstream of ALK4 and ActRII receptors, Nodal pathway activity is
transduced by the receptor-associated Smads (R-Smads) Smad2 and/or Smad3,
together with the common mediator-Smad (co-Smad) Smad4
(Massague et al., 2005
).
Although Smad2 and Smad3 have differing abilities to regulate target gene
transcription, gene substitution experiments in the mouse have shown that
Smad3 can functionally replace Smad2 in vivo
(Dunn et al., 2005
).
Surprisingly, the phenotype of Smad4-null mutants is significantly
less severe than that of Nodal mutants or Smad2; Smad3
double mutants (Chu et al.,
2004
), suggesting that other proteins may provide a co-Smad
function in early mouse development. Such a possibility is consistent with the
ability of the nuclear protein TIF1
(Trim33 - Mouse Genome Informatics)
to interact with activated Smad2/3 to mediate TGFß signaling in
hematopoietic progenitors (He et al.,
2006
).
At the transcriptional level, Nodal pathway function is tightly coupled
with the activities of the winged-helix transcription factor FoxH1 and the
Mixer subclass of homeodomain proteins. These proteins contain
Smad-interaction motifs that are required for their interaction with
Smad2/Smad3, leading to the formation of active transcription complexes on the
enhancers of Nodal pathway target genes
(Germain et al., 2000
;
Randall et al., 2004
).
However, genetic analyses in zebrafish indicate that FoxH1 and Mixer do not
fully account for Nodal-mediated transcriptional events
(Kunwar et al., 2003
),
indicating that additional transcription factors involved in Nodal responses
remain to be identified.
At present, most known targets of the Nodal pathway, such as Nodal,
Lefty2, Pitx2, FoxA2 and Lhx1
(Table 1), undergo
transcriptional activation in response to Nodal signals, whereas a few are
transcriptionally repressed (Dickmeis et
al., 2001
; Whitman,
2001
). Nodal itself is positively autoregulated through
the asymmetric enhancer (ASE) located in its first intron
(Adachi et al., 1999
;
Norris et al., 2002
;
Norris and Robertson, 1999
),
and by an upstream left-side specific enhancer (LSE)
(Saijoh et al., 2005
;
Vincent et al., 2004
). In
part, transcriptional activation is likely to occur through the interaction of
Smad2/3-Smad4 proteins with ARC105, a subunit of the Mediator transcriptional
co-activator complex (Kato et al.,
2002
). Transcriptional activation is also likely to require
chromatin remodelling mediated by the ability of phosphorylated Smad2 to
recruit the p300 histone acetyltransferase as well as Brg1 (Smarca4 - Mouse
Genome Informatics), a component of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex
(He et al., 2006
;
Ross et al., 2006
).
The generation and interpretation of graded Nodal signals
Nodal ligands have the properties associated with a morphogen: a signal
that acts over a distance to elicit dose-dependent responses in a
developmental field of responsive cells
(Ashe and Briscoe, 2006
). The
mechanisms by which such graded signals can be generated and interpreted have
been of particular interest because they are fundamental for embryonic tissue
patterning.
Long-range action
In zebrafish, the Nodal ligand Sqt as well as its inhibitor Lefty can
function as long-range mesoderm-inducing signals in vivo, whereas Cyc cannot
(Chen and Schier, 2001
;
Chen and Schier, 2002
).
Celltransplantation experiments in zebrafish have shown that Sqt signals can
traverse cells that lack the EGF-CFC co-receptor Oep, and thus are
unresponsive to Sqt, to activate responses in distant wild-type cells in the
absence of a signaling relay mechanism
(Chen and Schier, 2001
). In
the mouse, Lefty2 hypomorphic mutants display ectopic Nodal pathway
activation in the right lateral plate mesoderm, suggesting that an excess of
left-sided Nodal protein has undergone long-range diffusion to the right side
(Meno et al., 2001
).
Consistent with these findings, GFP-labeled Nodal or Lefty2 proteins can
travel over long distances (up to 500 µm) when expressed in chick embryos
(Sakuma et al., 2002
).
Furthermore, the visualization of GFP-tagged Xnr2 protein movement from
Xnr2-expressing Xenopus animal caps into adjacent non-expressing caps
has revealed no evidence of transcytosis, argosomal transport or cytonemes;
instead, long-range movement of Xnr2 appears to occur by diffusion through the
extracellular matrix (Williams et al.,
2004
).
Recent findings suggest that the stability as well as the efficiency of
Nodal ligand processing are primary determinants of their signaling range (Box
2). Studies in cell culture and in zebrafish have shown that the Nodal
proprotein is relatively stable, whereas the processed mature ligand is
readily degraded following its cellular internalization
(Le Good et al., 2005
). In
particular, the long-range movement of Nodal ligands may correspond to the
diffusion of a relatively stable proprotein, and its subsequent extracellular
cleavage by the proprotein convertases Furin (Spc1) or Pace4 (Spc4/Pcsk6) then
generates a labile mature ligand (Beck et
al., 2002
; Le Good et al.,
2005
).
Dose-dependent responses
As is the case with other potent developmental signaling factors, Nodal
signaling can induce dose-dependence in cellular responses. This is
exemplified by Nodal-mediated specification of mesodermal identity, as
initially shown in gain-of-function studies of Activin signaling in
Xenopus (Green and Smith,
1990
; Gurdon et al.,
1994
; Gurdon et al.,
1999
). Subsequent loss-of-function analyses of sqt and
cyc double mutants in fish have demonstrated that different levels of
Nodal activity are required for the patterning of the mesoderm along the
animal-vegetal axis (Dougan et al.,
2003
), including the specification of prechordal mesoderm versus
notochord during axial mesoderm differentiation
(Gritsman et al., 2000
). A
similar dose-dependent response to Nodal pathway activity in mice has been
supported by the progressively more severe defects in mesendoderm formation
observed in increasing doses of Smad2 and Smad3 mutant
alleles (Dunn et al., 2004
;
Vincent et al., 2003
).
The dose-dependent responses of cells to Nodal signaling may be due to
differing levels of Nodal pathway activity, or to differing durations of
exposure, or both (Gritsman et al.,
2000
). Responding cells appear to be exquisitely sensitive to
Activin/Nodal levels, even without amplification of pathway activity, as
threefold differences in receptor occupancy result in equivalent increases in
nuclear Smad2 concentration (Shimizu and
Gurdon, 1999
). Importantly, overall pathway activity corresponds
to the maximal level of receptor occupancy and Smad2 activation, which can be
maintained even after ligand withdrawal
(Bourillot et al., 2002
). At
present, the molecular mechanisms by which these differing levels of pathway
activity are interpreted as distinct transcriptional responses remain to be
elucidated.
|
Reaction-diffusion mechanism
The regulatory properties of the Nodal pathway strongly resemble the
characteristics of a biological reaction-diffusion system, which can generate
a stable graded signal across a responsive developmental field
(Fig. 2)
(Chen and Schier, 2002
;
Saijoh et al., 2000
). Such a
reaction-diffusion system depends on the ability of ligands and antagonists to
diffuse over a long distance, coupled with positive and negative
autoregulatory loops (Meinhardt and
Gierer, 2000
). In particular, the diffusion of Lefty inhibitors in
tissue appears to be more efficient than that of Nodal
(Sakuma et al., 2002
), which
represents a crucial component of such a reaction-diffusion system. This
mechanism is likely to function during mesoderm patterning, as well as in
left-right specification (Chen and Schier,
2002
; Nakamura et al.,
2006
).
Central functions of Nodal signaling in embryogenesis
Numerous biological activities in early embryogenesis have been ascribed to functions of the Nodal pathway. However, the roles of Nodal signaling and antagonism in mesoderm and endoderm induction, neural patterning and left-right specification appear to be particularly well-conserved (Box 3).
Mesoderm induction and patterning
Although Nodal pathway activity is essential for mesoderm formation, there
appear to be species-specific differences in the relative roles of Nodal and
Vg1/Gdf3 in this process, and in their interactions with the canonical Wnt
signaling pathway. In Xenopus embryos, the maternally-encoded VegT
transcription factor cooperates with activated ß-catenin to activate
zygotic transcription of Xnr and Vg1 ligands in the vegetal region, leading to
a dorsal-ventral (D-V) graded Nodal signal that induces dose-dependent
mesendoderm formation in the marginal zone, with higher levels resulting in
dorsal specification (Fig. 3A)
(Agius et al., 2000
;
Kimelman, 2006
).
Alternatively, D-V mesoderm patterning might be due to differences in the
timing of the onset of Nodal signaling, with earlier and longer signaling
leading to a dorsal identity (Lee et al.,
2001
).
The expression of zygotic sqt and cyc in the zebrafish
embryo is induced by an as yet unidentified ß-catenin-dependent signal(s)
in the extraembryonic yolk syncytial layer (YSL)
(Chen and Kimelman, 2000
),
resulting in mesendoderm formation at the blastoderm margin
(Fig. 3B). Interestingly,
genetic analyses in zebrafish have suggested that long-range graded Nodal
signaling is responsible for mesoderm patterning along the animal-vegetal
axis, not along the D-V axis (Dougan et
al., 2003
). Finally, in the chick embryo, Vg1 plays a primary role
together with Wnt8c to induce primitive streak formation in the posterior
marginal zone, and subsequently induce Nodal expression in the
epiblast (Fig. 3C)
(Bertocchini et al., 2004
;
Skromne and Stern, 2001
).
|
Endoderm formation
The formation of the endoderm also requires Nodal signaling, which is
mediated by Mixer homeoproteins (Lewis and
Tam, 2006
; Stainier,
2002
), and may represent a dose-dependent response to levels of
Nodal activity that are higher than those required for mesoderm formation
(Agius et al., 2000
;
Thisse et al., 2000
;
Vincent et al., 2003
). In
Xenopus, endoderm formation can be induced by overexpression of four
of the seven Mixer (Mix/Bix) - related homeoproteins, and can be abolished by
morpholino knock-down of Mixer (Mix.3)
(Kofron et al., 2004
).
Conversely, knock-down of Mixer expands the mesoderm, as shown by the
upregulation of Xnr1 and Xnr5, and increases
mesoderm-inducing activity in animal cap assays
(Kofron et al., 2004
).
Similarly, null mutants for the mouse Mixl1 (Mml) homeobox
gene display reduced definitive endoderm, but also overexpress Nodal
and generate excess axial mesoderm (Hart
et al., 2002
). Taken together, these studies suggest that Mixer
homeoproteins are expressed in mesendoderm progenitors and specify endoderm in
response to high-level Nodal signals by inducing endoderm-specific genes such
as Sox17, while simultaneously repressing the expression of several
mesoderm-inducing genes, including those encoding Nodal ligands.
Neural patterning
Nodal signaling plays dual roles in neural development, as the generation
of anterior neural tissue requires its inhibition, whereas the subsequent
maintenance and patterning of neural tissue depends upon axial mesendoderm
generated in response to Nodal signaling. In the mouse embryo, the anterior
visceral endoderm (AVE) plays a key role in anterior specification of the
adjacent epiblast (Fig. 4)
(Rossant and Tam, 2004
). The
AVE produces the Nodal antagonists Lefty1 and Cerberus-1 (Cer1), which are
essential for anterior neural patterning and which prevent the formation of
enlarged or duplicated primitive streaks that result from excessive Nodal
activity (Perea-Gomez et al.,
2002
). Similarly, in the chick embryo, Cerberus expressed
in the extraembryonic hypoblast (analogous to the mouse AVE) positions and
limits the primitive streak, in cooperation with another Nodal antagonist that
may be Lefty1 (Bertocchini et
al., 2004
; Bertocchini and
Stern, 2002
). Furthermore, Cerberus expressed in the
anterior endoderm antagonizes Nodal and Wnt ligands to allow head formation in
Xenopus (Piccolo et al.,
1999
).
|
Left-right patterning
During left-right (L-R) axis specification, Nodal pathway activity
regulates the propagation of left-sided positional information from the node
to the left lateral plate mesoderm (LPM), and is required in both locations
(Raya and Belmonte, 2006
;
Shiratori and Hamada, 2006
).
Following initial events that establish L-R asymmetry, Nodal activity is
upregulated on the left side of the node
(Fig. 5A), through a process
that might involve asymmetric Ca2+ signaling and Notch pathway
activity. It is known that the asymmetric expression of Nodal occurs
in the left LPM of all vertebrate species thus far examined, and leads to
tissue-specific laterality decisions.
In the mouse, Nodal expression in the node is essential for the
subsequent asymmetric gene expression in the LPM
(Brennan et al., 2002
;
Saijoh et al., 2003
). In
zebrafish, however, expression of the Nodal ligand spaw around
Kupffer's vesicle is not essential for spaw expression in the LPM
(Long et al., 2003
),
suggesting that a different factor is involved in the transfer of left-sided
information. Intriguingly, mouse Gdf1 is expressed in the peri-nodal
region as well as in the LPM (Wall et
al., 2000
), and Gdf1-null mutants have a L-R patterning
phenotype indistinguishable from that of mutants for the EGF-CFC gene
Cryptic (Rankin et al.,
2000
; Yan et al.,
1999
). A role for Nodal pathway function in the node is further
supported by studies of zebrafish charon and mouse Cer2
(Dante, Dand5), genes that encode Cer/DAN family members that can
antagonize Nodal ligands (Hashimoto et
al., 2004
; Marques et al.,
2004
).
Current models suggest that Nodal and/or Gdf1 proteins signal at long-range
from the node to the LPM, although a signal relay mechanism involving
intermediary signaling factors has not been excluded. In the mouse, evidence
supporting a direct signaling interaction has emerged from studies of
Nodal promoter elements, in particular the left-side enhancer (LSE)
and asymmetric enhancer (ASE), which both drive Nodal expression in
the left LPM, and contain FoxH1-binding sites that are essential for their
function (Norris et al., 2002
;
Saijoh et al., 2000
;
Saijoh et al., 2005
;
Vincent et al., 2004
). The
subsequent auto-activation of Nodal results in the rapid spread of
Nodal expression throughout the left LPM, as well as the induction of
Pitx2 expression and the subsequent downregulation of Nodal activity
by Lefty2 via a negative-feedback loop
(Fig. 5B). Nodal signaling is
also essential for the expression of Lefty1 in the axial midline,
which can act as a molecular barrier that prevents the leakage of left-sided
Nodal signals to the right side, and can suppress ectopic right-sided activity
(Meno et al., 1998
;
Yamamoto et al., 2003
).
Mathematical modeling shows that this
Nodal-Lefty-Pitx2 expression cassette generates a
modified reaction-diffusion mechanism that ensures the uniform propagation of
Nodal signals throughout the left LPM, while inhibiting its spread to the
right side (Nakamura et al.,
2006
).
|
Over recent years, unexpected roles for Nodal signaling have continued to emerge. The extent to which these functions are evolutionarily conserved is currently unknown.
Dorsal-ventral axis specification by maternal transcripts
Although the activation of canonical Wnt signaling specifies dorsal
identity in frogs and zebrafish (Kimelman,
2006
; Schier and Talbot,
2005
), a recent study has proposed that maternal transcripts for
the Nodal ligand sqt act as dorsal determinants in zebrafish
(Gore et al., 2005
). In
particular, maternal sqt transcripts are localized in dorsal
blastomeres in a majority of zebrafish embryos at the four-cell and eight-cell
stages, whereas morpholino knock-down of maternal sqt leads to a
ventralized phenotype (Gore et al.,
2005
). The localization of sqt transcripts to dorsal
blastomeres is conferred by sequence motifs in the 3' untranslated
region (UTR), which can confer a similar localization when fused in cis to
heterologous lacZ mRNA (Gore et
al., 2005
); the underlying mechanism may resemble those utilized
for active transport of mRNA transcripts in Drosophila and
Xenopus embryos (Palacios and St
Johnston, 2001
). Interestingly, these sequence motifs also occur
in Nodal genes in several mammalian species, including human, raising
the possibility of a conserved developmental mechanism
(Gore et al., 2005
). However,
the significance of these findings is currently uncertain because the
phenotype of maternal-zygotic sqt mutants resembles that of zygotic
sqt mutants (Aoki et al.,
2002
), suggesting that maternal sqt transcripts are not
essential for dorsal specification.
Anterior-posterior axis formation
In the mouse, Nodal signaling is required for at least two events
associated with anterior-posterior (A-P) axis specification: the formation and
directional movement of the AVE (Fig.
4). The AVE initially forms in the most distal portion of the
post-implantation egg cylinder, but then translocates to the prospective
anterior side within 12 hours
(Rivera-Perez et al., 2003
;
Srinivas et al., 2004
;
Thomas et al., 1998
). In the
absence of Nodal, no AVE is formed and no evidence of an A-P axis is
apparent (Brennan et al.,
2001
; Norris et al.,
2002
). In the absence of Cripto or in hypomorphic
Nodal mutants, the AVE forms but does not translocate
(Ding et al., 1998
;
Lowe et al., 2001
;
Norris et al., 2002
). The
activity of the mouse Nodal pathway ligand Gdf3 is also crucial for AVE
induction, as well as for its movement, as both processes can be affected in
Gdf3- null mutants (Chen et al.,
2006
). Finally, Nodal activity might also play an indirect
permissive role in these processes, as AVE formation may require the epiblast
to reach a threshold size to dilute an inhibitory signal from the distant
extraembryonic ectoderm (Rodriguez et
al., 2005
), a process that is impaired in Nodal mutants
(Mesnard et al., 2006
).
Prior to AVE movement, the expression of Lefty1 and Cer1
in the distal visceral endoderm displays a slightly asymmetric bias toward the
prospective anterior side (Takaoka et
al., 2006
; Yamamoto et al.,
2004
). This asymmetric expression of Nodal antagonists has been
proposed to mediate directional AVE movement by inhibiting cell proliferation
in the visceral endoderm on the prospective anterior side, while allowing
Nodal activity to drive cell proliferation posteriorly
(Yamamoto et al., 2004
).
Interestingly, A-P polarity may exist at even earlier stages, as the
asymmetric expression of a Lefty1-lacZ transgene can be detected in
the primitive endoderm of the peri-implantation embryo
(Takaoka et al., 2006
).
Although Lefty1 itself is not required for A-P axis formation,
expression of the Lefty1-lacZ transgene is abolished in
FoxH1 mutants (Takaoka et al.,
2006
), suggesting that Nodal pathway function is essential for
early A-P polarity in the mouse.
Maintenance of undifferentiated ES cells
Recent studies have suggested that Nodal signaling is required for the
maintenance of undifferentiated human and mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells.
Indeed, all key components of the Nodal pathway are highly expressed in both
undifferentiated mouse and human ES cells
(Brandenberger et al., 2004
).
Overexpression of Nodal in human ES cells inhibits mesoderm differentiation
within embryoid bodies (formed from three-dimensional aggregates of ES cells
in culture), and maintains cells in the undifferentiated state, while
simultaneously promoting visceral endoderm differentiation at the surface of
embryoid bodies (Vallier et al.,
2004
). Conversely, the inhibition of pathway activity leads to
decreased stem cell self-renewal and loss of expression of the pluripotency
regulators OCT4 (POU5F1 - Human Gene Nomenclature Database)
and NANOG (James et al.,
2005
; Vallier et al.,
2005
). By contrast, similar treatment of mouse ES cells does not
yield the same effects, suggesting possible species-specific differences in
Nodal function (James et al.,
2005
). However, these observations are consistent with findings
that Nodal signaling in vivo is required to maintain epiblast pluripotency and
prevent precocious neural differentiation
(Brennan et al., 2001
;
Camus et al., 2006
;
Ding et al., 1998
;
Mesnard et al., 2006
).
Potential role in carcinogenesis
Although most genes in the Nodal pathway are rarely expressed during later
development and adulthood, there is evidence that pathway activity is
upregulated in many human cancers. In particular, increased expression of
Nodal in malignant melanoma is correlated with cancer progression,
whereas pathway inhibition decreases tumorigenicity in xenograft assays
(Topczewska et al., 2006
).
These findings are consistent with the upregulation of Cripto that is
observed in many epithelial cancers
(Strizzi et al., 2005
), and
with the ability of Cripto overexpression to promote tumorigenesis in
xenografts and transgenic mice (Adkins et
al., 2003
; Sun et al.,
2005
). The mechanisms by which Nodal signaling may facilitate
cancer progression remain unclear, but analyses of transgenic mice have
suggested that Cripto can induce an epithelial-mesenchymal transition
(Strizzi et al., 2004
). At
present, however, it remains unknown whether any of the oncogenic effects of
Cripto are dependent on Nodal pathway activity.
Conclusion
Despite two decades of study of the Nodal pathway, numerous important questions regarding its functions and molecular mechanisms remain unanswered. Given the close apposition of distinct pathway functions in space and time, future studies will undoubtedly employ precise genetic tools to remove pathway activity in specific tissues and/or developmental stages. Furthermore, the cross-talk between this pathway and the parallel and/or synergistic functions of the canonical Wnt pathway will require additional investigation. Finally, the potential roles of Nodal pathway components in stem cell pluripotency and cancer progression will propel further studies of their function, and may provide future therapeutic targets.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I apologize to numerous colleagues whose work could not be cited owing to length constraints. I am indebted to Cory Abate-Shen, Ray Habas, Marianna Kruithof-de Julio, Alex Schier and Patrick Tam for helpful comments on the manuscript. Work on Nodal signaling in my laboratory is supported by the National Institutes of Health and by the New Jersey Stem Cell Research Program.
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