Transforming growth factor (TGF) pathways are implicated in metazoan development, adult homeostasis and disease. TGF ligands signal via receptor serine/threonine kinases that phosphorylate, and activate, intracellular Smad effectors as well as other signaling proteins. Oligomeric Smad complexes associate with chromatin and regulate transcription, defining the biological response of a cell to TGF family members. Signaling is modulated by negative-feedback regulation via inhibitory Smads. We review here the mechanisms of TGF signal transduction in metazoans and emphasize events crucial for embryonic development.
IntroductionThe human transforming growth factor (TGF) family consists of 33 members, most of which encode dimeric, secreted polypeptides that control developmental processes, ranging from gastrulation and body axis asymmetry to organ-specific morphogenesis and adult tissue homeostasis (reviewed by Derynck and Miyazono, 2008). In addition to TGFs, this family includes the bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), growth and differentiation factors (GDFs), activins and nodal. The TGF family is conserved throughout metazoan evolution. At the cellular level, TGF family members regulate cell growth, differentiation, adhesion, migration and death, in a developmental context-dependent and cell type-specific manner. For example, TGF more often inhibits, but sometimes also stimulates, cell proliferation (reviewed by Yang and Moses, 2008). Furthermore, nodal signaling sometimes inhibits, whereas BMP promotes, cell differentiation, as in stem cells (Watabe and Miyazono, 2009). As TGF ligands act multifunctionally in numerous tissue types, they also play complex roles in various human diseases, ranging from autoimmune to cardiovascular diseases and cancer (reviewed by Gordon and Blobe, 2008;Massagué, 2008).Here we review the core components of the TGF family and their signaling engines, as part of a Minifocus in this issue on TGF signaling (see Box 1), and discuss emerging concepts concerning the regulatory mechanisms of TGF pathways at the receptor, cytoplasmic and nuclear level. We also highlight recent discoveries that are of particular developmental relevance.
The TGF familyThe development of the axes and the asymmetry of the animal body depends on the localized action of extracellular signals, such as the Wnt, nodal and BMP ligands. Gradients of these ligands, their extracellular regulators and the competence of receptors in responding cells, play important roles during tissue morphogenesis (Affolter and Basler, 2007;Smith and Gurdon, 2004). TGF family members also contribute to tissue patterning and are important regulators of stem cell self-renewal and differentiation (see Box 2) (De Robertis and Kuroda, 2004;Watabe and Miyazono, 2009).The TGF morphogens include numerous secreted and conserved polypeptides (Table 1), which emerged at the onset of multicellular (metazoan) life (Huminiecki et al., 2009). Structurally, this family is characterized by a specific three-dimensional fold and by a conser...