Hogan B L, Blessing M, Winnier G E, Suzuki N, Jones C M
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Vanderbilt Medical School, Nashville, TN 37232-2175, USA.
Dev Suppl. 1994:53-60.
Embryonic induction, the process by which signals from one cell population influence the fate of another, plays an essential role in the development of all organisms so far studied. In many cases, the signalling molecules belong to large families of highly conserved proteins, originally identified as mammalian growth factors. The largest known family is related to Transforming Growth Factor-beta (TGF-beta) and currently consists of at least 24 different members. Genetic studies in Drosophila on the TGF-beta related gene, decapentaplegic (dpp), reveal the existence of conserved mechanisms regulating both the expression of the protein during development and the way in which it interacts with other signalling molecules to generate pattern within embryonic tissues. Comparative studies on another TGF-beta related gene, known as Bone Morphogenetic Protein-4 (BMP-4), in Xenopus and mouse point to a conserved role in specifying posteroventral mesoderm during gastrulation. Analysis of other polypeptide signalling molecules during gastrulation suggests that their interaction in the generation of the overall body plan has also been conserved during vertebrate evolution.
胚胎诱导是指一个细胞群发出的信号影响另一个细胞群命运的过程,在迄今所研究的所有生物体的发育中都起着至关重要的作用。在许多情况下,信号分子属于高度保守的蛋白质大家族,最初被鉴定为哺乳动物生长因子。已知最大的家族与转化生长因子-β(TGF-β)相关,目前至少由24个不同成员组成。对果蝇中与TGF-β相关的基因“五体不全”(dpp)的遗传学研究揭示了在发育过程中调节该蛋白质表达以及它与其他信号分子相互作用以在胚胎组织内形成模式的保守机制的存在。对非洲爪蟾和小鼠中另一个与TGF-β相关的基因骨形态发生蛋白-4(BMP-4)的比较研究表明,在原肠胚形成过程中,它在指定后腹侧中胚层方面具有保守作用。对原肠胚形成过程中其他多肽信号分子的分析表明,它们在整体身体模式形成中的相互作用在脊椎动物进化过程中也得到了保留。