4.3 Article

Hippo transducer TAZ promotes epithelial mesenchymal transition and supports pancreatic cancer progression

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 34, Pages 35949-35963

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.5772

Keywords

TAZ; EMT; proliferation; metastasis; pancreatic cancer

Funding

  1. Shanghai Key Special Department fund [ZK2012A26]
  2. Key Disciplines Group Construction Project from Pudong Health Bureau of Shanghai [PWZxq2014-04]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [81172022, 81272917, 81272241, 81502018, 81502043]
  4. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute [R01-CA152309]

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Transcriptional co-activator with PDZ binding motif (TAZ) is a transducer of the Hippo pathway and promotes cancer development and progression. In the present study, we sought to determine the roles and underlying mechanisms of elevated expression and activation of TAZ in pancreatic cancer development and progression. The mechanistic role of TAZ and Hippo signaling in promotion of pancreatic cancer development and progression was examined using cell culture, molecular biology, and mouse models. The relevance of our experimental and mechanistic findings was validated using human pancreatic tumor specimens. We found that TAZ expression was markedly higher in pancreatic tumors than in normal pancreatic tissue. Further analysis of the correlation of TAZ expression with tissue microarray clinicopathologic parameters revealed that this expression was positively associated with tumor differentiation. Also, TAZ expression was higher in pancreatic cancer cell lines than in pancreatic ductal epithelial cells. TAZ activation in pancreatic cancer cells promoted their proliferation, migration, invasion, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Further mechanistic studies demonstrated that aberrant expression and activation of TAZ in pancreatic cancer cells resulted from suppression of the expression of Merlin, a positive regulator upstream of the Hippo pathway, and that the oncogenic function of TAZ in pancreatic cancer cells was mediated by TEA/ATTS domain transcription factors. Therefore, TAZ functioned as an oncogene and promoted pancreatic cancer epithelial-mesenchymal transition and progression. TAZ thus may be a target for effective therapeutic strategies for pancreatic cancer.

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