Abstract

In vivo and in vitro studies argue that concentration dependent Wnt signaling regulates mammalian nephron progenitor cell (NPC) programs. Canonical Wnt signaling is regulated through the stabilization of β-catenin, a transcriptional co-activator when complexed with Lef/Tcf DNA binding partners. Utilizing the GSK3β inhibitor CHIR99021 (CHIR), to block GSK3β-dependent destruction of β-catenin, we examined dose-dependent responses to β-catenin in NPCs, using mRNA transduction to modify gene expression. Low CHIR-dependent proliferation of NPCs was blocked on β-catenin removal with evidence of NPCs arresting at the G2-M transition. While NPC identity was maintained following β-catenin removal, mRNA-seq identified low CHIR and β-catenin dependent genes. High CHIR activated nephrogenesis. Nephrogenic programming was dependent on Lef/Tcf factors and β-catenin transcriptional activity. Molecular and cellular features of early nephrogenesis were driven in the absence of CHIR by a mutated, stabilized form of β-catenin. Chromatin association studies indicate low and high CHIR response genes are likely direct targets of canonical Wnt transcriptional complexes. Together these studies provide evidence for concentration dependent Wnt-signaling in the regulation of NPCs and provide new insight into Wnt targets initiating mammalian nephrogenesis.

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