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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 2016

Abstract

Aberrant splicing is frequently found in cancer, yet the biological consequences of such alterations are mostly undefined. Here we report that the Hippo-YAP signalling, a key pathway that regulates cell proliferation and organ size, is under control of a splicing switch. We show that TEAD4, the transcription factor that mediates Hippo-YAP signalling, undergoes alternative splicing facilitated by the tumour suppressor RBM4, producing a truncated isoform, TEAD4-S, which lacks an N-terminal DNA-binding domain, but maintains YAP interaction domain. TEAD4-S is located in both the nucleus and cytoplasm, acting as a dominant negative isoform to YAP activity. Consistently, TEAD4-S is reduced in cancer cells, and its re-expression suppresses cancer cell proliferation and migration, inhibiting tumour growth in xenograft mouse models. Furthermore, TEAD4-S is reduced in human cancers, and patients with elevated TEAD4-S levels have improved survival. Altogether, these data reveal a splicing switch that serves to fine tune the Hippo-YAP pathway.

Details

Title
A splicing isoform of TEAD4 attenuates the Hippo-YAP signalling to inhibit tumour proliferation
Author
Qi, Yangfan; Yu, Jing; Han, Wei; Fan, Xiaojuan; Qian, Haili; Wei, Huanhuan; Tsai, Yi-hsuan S; Zhao, Jinyao; Zhang, Wenjing; Liu, Quentin; Meng, Songshu; Wang, Yang; Wang, Zefeng
Pages
ncomms11840
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Jun 2016
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20411723
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1796269658
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 2016