BMP signaling pathway in eyelid development (Mus musculus)
From WikiPathways
Description
The signaling pathways involved in eyelid development are displayed with interactions that are known (solid arrows) and proposed (dotted arrows). The four main pathways shown are activated by Fgf10 and regulate key processes, but also interact with each other. The first pathway is a proposed promotion of sfrp1 which inhibits Wnt that regulates the Meibomian Gland. The Wnt pathway also activates pitx2 and begins the proposed pathway to eyelid closure. The second pathway begins with Fgfr2 activating Bmp4, a protein that may also be regulated by Shh, and continuing through a protein chain to regulate conjunctival cell fate. In this pathway Bmp also inhibits transdifferentiation of Meibomian Gland into a hair follicle, conjunctiva proliferation, and precocious differentiation. The last two pathways are linked to the regulation of eyelid closure through a cascade of protein activation and is further promoted by Bmp through stimulation of phosphorylated c-Jun. This pathway is based on figure 10B from Huang et al.
Quality Tags
Ontology Terms
Pathway Ontology : methylmalonic aciduria, cobalamin-related pathway mitochondria dynamics pathway cobalamin metabolic pathway
Disease : methylmalonic acidemia methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria type cblF methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria type cblC vitamin B12 deficiency methylmalonic acidemia cb1A type methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria type cblD methylmalonic aciduria due to methylmalonyl-CoA mutase deficiency methylmalonic acidemia cb1B type
Cell Type : metabolising cell eukaryotic cell
Bibliography
- Huang J, Dattilo LK, Rajagopal R, Liu Y, Kaartinen V, Mishina Y, Deng CX, Umans L, Zwijsen A, Roberts AB, Beebe DC; ''FGF-regulated BMP signaling is required for eyelid closure and to specify conjunctival epithelial cell fate.''; Development, 2009 PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
History
View all... |
External references
DataNodes
View all... |
Annotated Interactions
No annotated interactions