Fine tuning of growth factor signals depends on fibrillin microfibril networks
- 25 March 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Birth Defects Research Part C: Embryo Today: Reviews
- Vol. 72 (1), 37-50
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bdrc.20000
Abstract
Growth factors, potent regulators of cell differentiation, tissue morphogenesis, tissue homeostasis, and cellular response to injury, reside in the extracellular matrix. Genetic evidence in humans and mice as well as biochemical data implicate fibrillins and LTBPs in the extracellular control of TGFβ and BMP signaling. Fibrillins and LTBPs form tissue‐specific and temporally regulated microfibril networks. In the developing embryo, three fibrillins and four LTBPs contribute molecular heterogeneity to microfibril networks, and provide different templates upon which TGFβ‐related growth factors can be positioned. By accommodating this molecular heterogeneity, microfibril architecture can orchestrate a variety of different signals in very specific tissue locations. Human fibrillinopathies display a broad phenotypic spectrum from tall to short stature, from hypermobile joints to joint contractures and stiffness, and from severe to mild or no cardiovascular manifestations. A spectrum of growth factor dysregulation may be caused by differential effects of mutations in fibrillins on microfibril architecture, thus altering appropriate targeting or positioning of growth factors within microfibril networks. Growth factor dysregulation may help to explain the broad phenotypic spectrum of the fibrillinopathies. Birth Defects Research (Part C) 72:37–50, 2004.Keywords
This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Homozygosity mapping of a Weill-Marchesani syndrome locus to chromosome 19p13.3-p13.2Human Genetics, 2002
- Bone abnormalities in latent TGF-β binding protein (Ltbp)-3–null mice indicate a role for Ltbp-3 in modulating TGF-β bioavailabilityThe Journal of cell biology, 2002
- Ten novelFBN2mutations in congenital contractural arachnodactyly: Delineation of the molecular pathogenesis and clinical phenotypeHuman Mutation, 2001
- Interaction of Tropoelastin with the Amino-terminal Domains of Fibrillin-1 and Fibrillin-2 Suggests a Role for the Fibrillins in Elastic Fiber AssemblyJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Clustering ofFBN2 mutations in patients with congenital contractural arachnodactyly indicates an important role of the domains encoded by exons 24 through 34 during human developmentAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1998
- Identification of the developmental marker, JB3-antigen, as fibrillin-2 and its de novo organization into embryonic microfibrous arraysDevelopmental Dynamics, 1998
- Identification and Characterization of an Eight-cysteine Repeat of the Latent Transforming Growth Factor-β Binding Protein-1 that Mediates Bonding to the Latent Transforming Growth Factor-β1Published by Elsevier ,1996
- Fibrillin-1: Organization in Microfibrils and Structural PropertiesJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- Delineation of the Marfan phenotype associated with mutations in exons 23–32 of theFBN1 geneAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1996
- Mutation in fibrillin-1 and the Marfanoid-craniosynostosis (Shprintzen-Goldberg) syndromeNature Genetics, 1996