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Publication : A Membrane-Tethered Ubiquitination Pathway Regulates Hedgehog Signaling and Heart Development.

First Author  Kong JH Year  2020
Journal  Dev Cell Volume  55
Issue  4 Pages  432-449.e12
PubMed ID  32966817 Mgi Jnum  J:299749
Mgi Id  MGI:6490014 Doi  10.1016/j.devcel.2020.08.012
Citation  Kong JH, et al. (2020) A Membrane-Tethered Ubiquitination Pathway Regulates Hedgehog Signaling and Heart Development. Dev Cell 55(4):432-449.e12
abstractText  The etiology of congenital heart defects (CHDs), which are among the most common human birth defects, is poorly understood because of its complex genetic architecture. Here, we show that two genes implicated in CHDs, Megf8 and Mgrn1, interact genetically and biochemically to regulate the strength of Hedgehog signaling in target cells. MEGF8, a transmembrane protein, and MGRN1, a RING superfamily E3 ligase, assemble to form a receptor-like ubiquitin ligase complex that catalyzes the ubiquitination and degradation of the Hedgehog pathway transducer Smoothened. Homozygous Megf8 and Mgrn1 mutations increased Smoothened abundance and elevated sensitivity to Hedgehog ligands. While mice heterozygous for loss-of-function Megf8 or Mgrn1 mutations were normal, double heterozygous embryos exhibited an incompletely penetrant syndrome of CHDs with heterotaxy. Thus, genetic interactions can arise from biochemical mechanisms that calibrate morphogen signaling strength, a conclusion broadly relevant for the many human diseases in which oligogenic inheritance is emerging as a mechanism for heritability.
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