학술논문

The Hippo effector YAP promotes resistance to RAF- and MEK-targeted cancer therapies
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Genetics. 47(3)
Subject
Agricultural
Veterinary and Food Sciences
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Agricultural Biotechnology
Cancer
Adaptor Proteins
Signal Transducing
Animals
Biomarkers
Tumor
Cell Line
Tumor
Drug Resistance
Neoplasm
Female
Gene Knockdown Techniques
Genes
ras
HEK293 Cells
HT29 Cells
Heterografts
Hippo Signaling Pathway
Humans
MAP Kinase Kinase Kinases
MAP Kinase Signaling System
Mice
Mice
Inbred NOD
Mice
SCID
Molecular Targeted Therapy
Mutation
Phosphoproteins
Protein Kinase Inhibitors
Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases
Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf
Transcription Factors
YAP-Signaling Proteins
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Agricultural biotechnology
Bioinformatics and computational biology
Language
Abstract
Resistance to RAF- and MEK-targeted therapy is a major clinical challenge. RAF and MEK inhibitors are initially but only transiently effective in some but not all patients with BRAF gene mutation and are largely ineffective in those with RAS gene mutation because of resistance. Through a genetic screen in BRAF-mutant tumor cells, we show that the Hippo pathway effector YAP (encoded by YAP1) acts as a parallel survival input to promote resistance to RAF and MEK inhibitor therapy. Combined YAP and RAF or MEK inhibition was synthetically lethal not only in several BRAF-mutant tumor types but also in RAS-mutant tumors. Increased YAP in tumors harboring BRAF V600E was a biomarker of worse initial response to RAF and MEK inhibition in patients, establishing the clinical relevance of our findings. Our data identify YAP as a new mechanism of resistance to RAF- and MEK-targeted therapy. The findings unveil the synthetic lethality of combined suppression of YAP and RAF or MEK as a promising strategy to enhance treatment response and patient survival.