The
Wnt signaling pathways are a group of
signal transduction pathways made of
proteins that pass signals from outside of a cell through cell surface receptors to the inside of the cell. Three Wnt signaling pathways have been characterized: the canonical Wnt pathway, the noncanonical planar cell polarity pathway, and the noncanonical Wnt/calcium pathway. All three Wnt signaling pathways are activated by the binding of a Wnt-protein ligand to a
Frizzled family
receptor, which passes the biological signal to the protein
Dishevelled inside the cell. The canonical Wnt pathway leads to regulation of
gene transcription, the noncanonical planar cell polarity pathway regulates the
cytoskeleton that is responsible for the shape of the cell, and the noncanonical Wnt/calcium pathway regulates
calcium inside the cell. Wnt signaling pathways use either nearby cell-cell communication (
paracrine) or same-cell communication (
autocrine). They are highly evolutionarily
conserved in animals, which means they are similar across many species of animal from fruit flies to humans. Wnt signaling was first identified for its role in
carcinogenesis, but has since been recognized for its function in
embryonic development. The embryonic processes it controls include
body axis patterning,
cell fate specification,
cell proliferation, and
cell migration. These processes are necessary for proper formation of important tissues including bone, heart, and muscle. Its role in embryonic development was discovered when genetic mutations in proteins in the Wnt pathway produced abnormal fruit fly embryos. Wnt signaling also controls tissue regeneration in adult bone marrow, skin and intestine. Later research found that the genes responsible for these abnormalities also influenced breast cancer development in mice.