ADMP controls the size of Spemann's organizer through a network of self-regulating expansion-restriction signals.
Avi LeibovichHadas Kot-LeibovichDanny Ben-ZviAbraham FainsodPublished in: BMC biology (2018)
We show that the opposed, organizer-promoting and organizer-restricting roles of ADMP are mediated by different receptors. A self-regulating network is proposed in which ADMP functions early through ALK2 to expand its own expression domain, the organizer, and later functions through ALK1 to restrict this domain. These effects are dependent on ADMP concentration, timing, and the spatial localization of the two receptors. This self-regulating temporal switch may control the size of the organizer and the genes expressed within in response to genetic and external stimuli during gastrulation.