Drosophila unpaired encodes a secreted protein that activates the JAK signaling pathway

  1. Douglas A. Harrison1,3,5,7,
  2. Patricia E. McCoon4,5,
  3. Richard Binari1,6,
  4. Michael Gilman4, and
  5. Norbert Perrimon1,2
  1. 1Department of Genetics and 2Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 USA; 3University of Kentucky, School of Biological Sciences, Lexington, Kentucky 40506 USA; 4ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 USA

Abstract

In vertebrates, many cytokines and growth factors have been identified as activators of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway. In Drosophila, JAK and STAT molecules have been isolated, but no ligands or receptors capable of activating the pathway have been described. We have characterized the unpaired(upd) gene, which displays the same distinctive embryonic mutant defects as mutations in the Drosophila JAK (hopscotch) and STAT (stat92E) genes. Upd is a secreted protein, associated with the extracellular matrix, that activates the JAK pathway. We propose that Upd is a ligand that relies on JAK signaling to stimulate transcription of pair-rule genes in a segmentally restricted manner in the early Drosophila embryo.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 5 These authors contributed equally to this work.

  • 6 Present address: Ontario Cancer Institutes, Toronto, Canada M5G 2M9.

  • 7 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL DougH{at}pop.uky.edu; FAX (606) 257-1717.

    • Received August 4, 1998.
    • Accepted August 26, 1998.
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