RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 GPI-anchored FGF directs cytoneme-mediated bidirectional signaling to self-regulate tissue-specific dispersion JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2021.02.23.432493 DO 10.1101/2021.02.23.432493 A1 Lijuan Du A1 Alex Sohr A1 Yujia Li A1 Sougata Roy YR 2021 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2021/11/21/2021.02.23.432493.abstract AB How signaling proteins generate a multitude of information to organize tissue patterns is critical to understanding morphogenesis. In Drosophila, FGF produced in wing-disc cells regulates the development of the disc-associated air-sac-primordium/ASP. We discovered that FGF is GPI-anchored to the producing cell surface and that this modification both inhibits free FGF secretion and activates target-specific bidirectional FGF-FGFR signaling through cytonemes. Source and ASP cells extend cytonemes that present FGF and FGFR on their surfaces and reciprocally recognize each other over distance by contacting each other through CAM-like FGF-FGFR binding. Contact-mediated FGF-FGFR binding induces bidirectional signaling, which, in turn, promotes ASP and source cells to polarize cytonemes toward each other and reinforce signaling contacts. Subsequent un-anchoring of FGFR-bound-FGF from the source membrane dissociates cytoneme contacts and delivers FGF target-specifically to ASP cytonemes for paracrine functions. Thus, GPI-anchored FGF organizes both source and recipient cells and self-regulates its cytoneme-mediated tissue-specific dispersion and signaling.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.