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37
result(s) for
"Tao, Chunyao"
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Modulating F-actin organization induces organ growth by affecting the Hippo pathway
by
Sansores‐Garcia, Leticia
,
Tao, Chunyao
,
Halder, Georg
in
Actins - biosynthesis
,
Actins - chemistry
,
Actins - genetics
2011
The Hippo tumour suppressor pathway is a conserved signalling pathway that controls organ size. The core of the Hpo pathway is a kinase cascade, which in
Drosophila
involves the Hpo and Warts kinases that negatively regulate the activity of the transcriptional coactivator Yorkie. Although several additional components of the Hippo pathway have been discovered, the inputs that regulate Hippo signalling are not fully understood. Here, we report that induction of extra F‐actin formation, by loss of Capping proteins A or B, or caused by overexpression of an activated version of the formin Diaphanous, induced strong overgrowth in
Drosophila
imaginal discs through modulating the activity of the Hippo pathway. Importantly, loss of Capping proteins and Diaphanous overexpression did not significantly affect cell polarity and other signalling pathways, including Hedgehog and Decapentaplegic signalling. The interaction between F‐actin and Hpo signalling is evolutionarily conserved, as the activity of the mammalian Yorkie‐orthologue Yap is modulated by changes in F‐actin. Thus, regulators of F‐actin, and in particular Capping proteins, are essential for proper growth control by affecting Hippo signalling.
This study identifies actin organization as an upstream regulator of the Hippo pathway: F‐actin accumulation promotes Yorkie‐dependent transcriptional activation. This modulation of Hippo signalling by actin regulators controls organ growth in Drosophila.
Journal Article
apical-basal cell polarity determinant Crumbs regulates Hippo signaling in Drosophila
by
Tao, Chunyao
,
Halder, Georg
,
Gajewski, Kathleen M
in
adaptor proteins
,
Animals
,
Binding sites
2010
Defects in apical-basal cell polarity and abnormal expression of cell polarity determinants are often associated with cancer in vertebrates. In Drosophila, abnormal expression of apical-basal determinants can cause neoplastic phenotypes, including loss of cell polarity and overproliferation. However, the pathways through which apical-basal polarity determinants affect growth are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the mechanism by which the apical determinant Crumbs (Crb) affects growth in Drosophila imaginal discs. Overexpression of Crb causes severe overproliferation, and we found that loss of Crb similarly results in overgrowth of imaginal discs. Crb gain and loss of function caused defects in Hippo signaling, a key signaling pathway that controls tissue growth in Drosophila and mammals. Manipulation of Crb levels caused the up-regulation of Hippo target genes, genetically interacted with known Hippo pathway components, and required Yorkie, a transcriptional coactivator that acts downstream in the Hippo pathway, for target gene induction and overgrowth. Interestingly, Crb regulates growth and cell polarity through different motifs in its intracellular domain. A juxtamembrane FERM domain-binding motif is responsible for growth regulation and induction of Hippo target gene expression, whereas Crb uses a PDZ-binding motif to form a complex with other polarity factors. The Hippo pathway component Expanded, an apically localized adaptor protein, is mislocalized in both crb mutant cells and Crb overexpressing tissues, whereas the other Hippo pathway components, Fat and Merlin, are unaffected. Taken together, our data show that Crb regulates growth through Hippo signaling, and thus identify Crb as a previously undescribed upstream input into the Hippo pathway.
Journal Article
Tumor suppression by cell competition through regulation of the Hippo pathway
2012
Homeostatic mechanisms can eliminate abnormal cells to prevent diseases such as cancer. However, the underlying mechanisms of this surveillance are poorly understood. Here we investigated how clones of cells mutant for the neoplastic tumor suppressor gene scribble (scrib) are eliminated from Drosophila imaginal discs. When all cells in imaginal discs are mutant for scrib, they hyperactivate the Hippo pathway effector Yorkie (Yki), which drives growth of the discs into large neoplastic masses. Strikingly, when discs also contain normal cells, the scrib– cells do not overproliferate and eventually undergo apoptosis through JNK-dependent mechanisms. However, induction of apoptosis does not explain how scrib– cells are prevented from overproliferating. We report that cell competition between scrib– and wild-type cells prevents hyperproliferation by suppressing Yki activity in scrib– cells. Suppressing Yki activation is critical for scrib– clone elimination by cell competition, and experimental elevation of Yki activity in scrib– cells is sufficient to fuel their neoplastic growth. Thus, cell competition acts as a tumor-suppressing mechanism by regulating the Hippo pathway in scrib– cells.
Journal Article
Differential regulation of the Hippo pathway by adherens junctions and apical–basal cell polarity modules
by
Tao, Chunyao
,
Halder, Georg
,
Graves, Hillary K.
in
adherens junctions
,
Adherens Junctions - metabolism
,
alpha Catenin - genetics
2015
Adherens junctions (AJs) and cell polarity complexes are key players in the establishment and maintenance of apical–basal cell polarity. Loss of AJs or basolateral polarity components promotes tumor formation and metastasis. Recent studies in vertebrate models show that loss of AJs or loss of the basolateral component Scribble (Scrib) cause deregulation of the Hippo tumor suppressor pathway and hyperactivation of its downstream effectors Yes-associated protein (YAP) and Transcriptional coactivator with PDZ-binding motif (TAZ). However, whether AJs and Scrib act through the same or independent mechanisms to regulate Hippo pathway activity is not known. Here, we dissect how disruption of AJs or loss of basolateral components affect the activity of theDrosophilaYAP homolog Yorkie (Yki) during imaginal disc development. Surprisingly, disruption of AJs and loss of basolateral proteins produced very different effects on Yki activity. Yki activity was cell-autonomously decreased but non–cell-autonomously elevated in tissues where the AJ componentsE-cadherin(E-cad) orα-catenin(α-cat) were knocked down. In contrast,scribknockdown caused a predominantly cell-autonomous activation of Yki. Moreover, disruption of AJs or basolateral proteins had different effects on cell polarity and tissue size. Simultaneous knockdown ofα-catandscribinduced both cell-autonomous and non–cell-autonomous Yki activity. In mammalian cells, knockdown ofE-cadorα-catcaused nuclear accumulation and activation of YAP without overt effects on Scrib localization and vice versa. Therefore, our results indicate the existence of multiple, genetically separable inputs from AJs and cell polarity complexes into Yki/YAP regulation.
Journal Article
Boundaries of Dachsous Cadherin activity modulate the Hippo signaling pathway to induce cell proliferation
by
Sansores-Garcia, Leticia
,
Willecke, Maria
,
Tao, Chunyao
in
Animals
,
Biological Sciences
,
Boundaries
2008
The conserved Hippo tumor suppressor pathway is a key signaling pathway that controls organ size in DROSOPHILA: To date a signal transduction cascade from the Cadherin Fat at the plasma membrane into the nucleus has been discovered. However, how the Hippo pathway is regulated by extracellular signals is poorly understood. Fat not only regulates growth but also planar cell polarity, for which it interacts with the Dachsous (Ds) Cadherin, and Four-jointed (Fj), a transmembrane kinase that modulates the interaction between Ds and Fat. Ds and Fj are expressed in gradients and manipulation of their expression causes abnormal growth. However, how Ds and Fj regulate growth and whether they act through the Hippo pathway is not known. Here, we report that Ds and Fj regulate Hippo signaling to control growth. Interestingly, we found that Ds/Fj regulate the Hippo pathway through a remarkable logic. Induction of Hippo target genes is not proportional to the amount of Ds or Fj presented to a cell, as would be expected if Ds and Fj acted as traditional ligands. Rather, Hippo target genes are up-regulated when neighboring cells express different amounts of Ds or Fj. Consistent with a model that differences in Ds/Fj levels between cells regulate the Hippo pathway, we found that artificial Ds/Fj boundaries induce extra cell proliferation, whereas flattening the endogenous Ds and Fj gradients results in growth defects. The Ds/Fj signaling system thus defines a cell-to-cell signaling mechanism that regulates the Hippo pathway, thereby contributing to the control of organ size.
Journal Article
Hippo promotes proliferation arrest and apoptosis in the Salvador/Warts pathway
by
Udan, Ryan S.
,
Kango-Singh, Madhuri
,
Tao, Chunyao
in
Animals
,
Animals, Genetically Modified
,
Apoptosis
2003
Proliferation and apoptosis must be precisely regulated to form organs with appropriate cell numbers and to avoid tumour growth
1
,
2
. Here we show that Hippo (Hpo), the
Drosophila
homologue of the mammalian Ste20-like kinases
3
, MST1/2, promotes proper termination of cell proliferation and stimulates apoptosis during development.
hpo
mutant tissues are larger than normal because mutant cells continue to proliferate beyond normal tissue size and are resistant to apoptotic stimuli that usually eliminate extra cells. Hpo negatively regulates expression of Cyclin E to restrict cell proliferation, downregulates the
Drosophila
inhibitor of apoptosis protein DIAP1, and induces the proapoptotic gene
head involution defective
(
hid
) to promote apoptosis. The mutant phenotypes of
hpo
are similar to those of
warts
(
wts
), which encodes a serine/threonine kinase of the myotonic dystrophy protein kinase family
4
,
5
, and
salvador
(
sav
), which encodes a WW domain protein that binds to Wts
6
,
7
. We find that Sav binds to a regulatory domain of Hpo that is essential for its function, indicating that Hpo acts together with Sav and Wts in a signalling module that coordinately regulates cell proliferation and apoptosis.
Journal Article
The tumour-suppressor genes NF2/Merlin and Expanded act through Hippo signalling to regulate cell proliferation and apoptosis
2006
Merlin, the protein product of the Neurofibromatosis type-2 gene, acts as a tumour suppressor in mice and humans. Merlin is an adaptor protein with a FERM domain and it is thought to transduce a growth-regulatory signal. However, the pathway through which Merlin acts as a tumour suppressor is poorly understood. Merlin, and its function as a negative regulator of growth, is conserved in
Drosophila
, where it functions with Expanded, a related FERM domain protein. Here, we show that
Drosophila
Merlin and Expanded are components of the Hippo signalling pathway, an emerging tumour-suppressor pathway. We find that Merlin and Expanded, similar to other components of the Hippo pathway, are required for proliferation arrest and apoptosis in developing imaginal discs. Our genetic and biochemical data place Merlin and Expanded upstream of Hippo and identify a pathway through which they act as tumour-suppressor genes.
Journal Article
The apical-basal cell polarity determinant Crumbs regulates Hippo signaling in Drosophila
2010
Defects in apical-basal cell polarity and abnormal expression of cell polarity determinants are often associated with cancer in vertebrates. In Drosophila, abnormal expression of apical-basal determinants can cause neoplastic phenotypes, including loss of cell polarity and overproliferation. However, the pathways through which apical-basal polarity determinants affect growth are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the mechanism by which the apical determinant Crumbs (Crb) affects growth in Drosophila imaginal discs. Overexpression of Crb causes severe overproliferation, and we found that loss of Crb similarly results in overgrowth of imaginal discs. Crb gain and loss of function caused defects in Hippo signaling, a key signaling pathway that controls tissue growth in Drosophila and mammals. Manipulation of Crb levels caused the up-regulation of Hippo target genes, genetically interacted with known Hippo pathway components, and required Yorkie, a transcriptional coactivator that acts downstream in the Hippo pathway, for target gene induction and overgrowth. Interestingly, Crb regulates growth and cell polarity through different motifs in its intracellular domain. A juxtamembrane FERM domain-binding motif is responsible for growth regulation and induction of Hippo target gene expression, whereas Crb uses a PDZ-binding motif to form a complex with other polarity factors. The Hippo pathway component Expanded, an apically localized adaptor protein, is mislocalized in both crb mutant cells and Crb overexpressing tissues, whereas the other Hippo pathway components, Fat and Merlin, are unaffected. Taken together, our data show that Crb regulates growth through Hippo signaling, and thus identify Crb as a previously undescribed upstream input into the Hippo pathway.
Journal Article
Contralesional functional network reorganization of the insular cortex in diffuse low-grade glioma patients
2021
Diffuse low-grade gliomas (DLGGs) growing on the insular lobe induce contralesional hemispheric insular lobe compensation of damaged functioning by increasing cortical volumes. However, it remains unclear how functional networks are altered in patients with insular lobe DLGGs during functional compensation. Thirty-five patients with insular DLGGs were classified into the left (insL, n = 16) and right groups (insR, n = 19), and 33 healthy subjects were included in the control group. Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to generate functional connectivity (FC), and network topological properties were evaluated using graph theoretical analysis based on FC matrices. Network-based statistics were applied to compare differences in the FC matrices. A false discovery rate was applied to correct the topological properties. There was no difference in the FC of edges between the control and insL groups; however, the nodal shortest path length of the right insular lobe was significantly increased in the insL group compared to the control group. Additionally, FC was increased in the functional edges originating from the left insular lobe in the insR group compared to the control group. Moreover, there were no differences in topological properties between the insR and control groups. The contralesional insular lobe is crucial for network alterations. The detailed patterns of network alterations were different depending on the affected hemisphere. The observed network alterations might be associated with functional network reorganization and functional compensation.
Journal Article