학술논문

NF2 Loss Promotes Oncogenic RAS-Induced Thyroid Cancers via YAP-Dependent Transactivation of RAS Proteins and Sensitizes Them to MEK Inhibition.
Document Type
article
Source
Cancer Discovery. 5(11)
Subject
Animals
Binding Sites
Cell Cycle Proteins
Cell Line
Tumor
Cell Transformation
Neoplastic
Chromosome Deletion
Chromosomes
Human
Pair 22
DNA Copy Number Variations
Disease Models
Animal
Drug Resistance
Neoplasm
Gene Deletion
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Gene Order
Gene Targeting
Genes
ras
Humans
Mice
Mice
Transgenic
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases
Models
Biological
Neoplasm Staging
Neurofibromin 2
Nuclear Proteins
Nucleotide Motifs
Position-Specific Scoring Matrices
Promoter Regions
Genetic
Protein Binding
Protein Kinase Inhibitors
Signal Transduction
Thyroid Neoplasms
Transcription Factors
Transcriptional Activation
Language
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Ch22q LOH is preferentially associated with RAS mutations in papillary and in poorly differentiated thyroid cancer (PDTC). The 22q tumor suppressor NF2, encoding merlin, is implicated in this interaction because of its frequent loss of function in human thyroid cancer cell lines. Nf2 deletion or Hras mutation is insufficient for transformation, whereas their combined disruption leads to murine PDTC with increased MAPK signaling. Merlin loss induces RAS signaling in part through inactivation of Hippo, which activates a YAP-TEAD transcriptional program. We find that the three RAS genes are themselves YAP-TEAD1 transcriptional targets, providing a novel mechanism of promotion of RAS-induced tumorigenesis. Moreover, pharmacologic disruption of YAP-TEAD with verteporfin blocks RAS transcription and signaling and inhibits cell growth. The increased MAPK output generated by NF2 loss in RAS-mutant cancers may inform therapeutic strategies, as it generates greater dependency on the MAPK pathway for viability. SIGNIFICANCE: Intensification of mutant RAS signaling through copy-number imbalances is commonly associated with transformation. We show that NF2/merlin inactivation augments mutant RAS signaling by promoting YAP/TEAD-driven transcription of oncogenic and wild-type RAS, resulting in greater MAPK output and increased sensitivity to MEK inhibitors.