How multiple receptor tyrosine kinases coordinate cell fate determination is yet to be elucidated. We show here that the receptor for platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) signaling recruits the p85 subunit of Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) to regulate mammalian lens development. Activation of PI3K signaling not only prevents B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL2)-Associated X (Bax)- and BCL2 Antagonist/Killer (Bak)-mediated apoptosis but also promotes Notch signaling to prevent premature cell differentiation. Reducing PI3K activity destabilizes the Notch intracellular domain, while the constitutive activation of Notch reverses the PI3K deficiency phenotype. In contrast, fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) recruit Fibroblast Growth Factor Recept...
AbstractThe vertebrate lens provides anin vivomodel to study the molecular mechanisms by which growt...
AbstractPrevious studies suggested that FGF signaling is important for lens formation. However, the ...
Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) is thought to control normal behaviour of lens cells and sustain lens...
How multiple receptor tyrosine kinases coordinate cell fate determination is yet to be elucidated. W...
How multiple receptor tyrosine kinases coordinate cell fate determination is yet to be elucidated. W...
(A) Deletion of FGF-signaling mediators Frs2 and Shp2 abolished ERK phosphorylation and Jag1 express...
AbstractThe vertebrate lens provides an excellent model to study the mechanisms that regulate termin...
(A–B) AKT phosphorylation was strongly stimulated by PDGFA but weakly by FGF2 in immortalized lens c...
AbstractThe Notch signal transduction pathway regulates the decision to proliferate versus different...
AbstractLens epithelial cells express many receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) that stimulate PI3K–AKT ...
AbstractPrevious studies of the developing lens have shown that Notch signaling regulates differenti...
AbstractNotch signaling is essential for proper lens development, however the specific requirements ...
The terminal steps of lens cell differentiation require elimination of all organelles to create a ce...
(A) Schematic diagram of the mammalian lens. PDGFRα is expressed in the lens epithelial cells (blue)...
AbstractIn mammals, two spatially and temporally distinct waves of fiber cell differentiation are cr...
AbstractThe vertebrate lens provides anin vivomodel to study the molecular mechanisms by which growt...
AbstractPrevious studies suggested that FGF signaling is important for lens formation. However, the ...
Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) is thought to control normal behaviour of lens cells and sustain lens...
How multiple receptor tyrosine kinases coordinate cell fate determination is yet to be elucidated. W...
How multiple receptor tyrosine kinases coordinate cell fate determination is yet to be elucidated. W...
(A) Deletion of FGF-signaling mediators Frs2 and Shp2 abolished ERK phosphorylation and Jag1 express...
AbstractThe vertebrate lens provides an excellent model to study the mechanisms that regulate termin...
(A–B) AKT phosphorylation was strongly stimulated by PDGFA but weakly by FGF2 in immortalized lens c...
AbstractThe Notch signal transduction pathway regulates the decision to proliferate versus different...
AbstractLens epithelial cells express many receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) that stimulate PI3K–AKT ...
AbstractPrevious studies of the developing lens have shown that Notch signaling regulates differenti...
AbstractNotch signaling is essential for proper lens development, however the specific requirements ...
The terminal steps of lens cell differentiation require elimination of all organelles to create a ce...
(A) Schematic diagram of the mammalian lens. PDGFRα is expressed in the lens epithelial cells (blue)...
AbstractIn mammals, two spatially and temporally distinct waves of fiber cell differentiation are cr...
AbstractThe vertebrate lens provides anin vivomodel to study the molecular mechanisms by which growt...
AbstractPrevious studies suggested that FGF signaling is important for lens formation. However, the ...
Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) is thought to control normal behaviour of lens cells and sustain lens...