4.5 Article

Yorkie drives Ras-induced tumor progression by microRNA-mediated inhibition of cellular senescence

Journal

SCIENCE SIGNALING
Volume 14, Issue 685, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.aaz3578

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [26114002]
  2. Takeda Science Foundation
  3. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (Project for Elucidating and Controlling Mechanisms of Aging and Longevity) [20gm5010001]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26114002] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The activation of Ras signaling induces cellular senescence, which must be overcome for cancer development. The ETS family transcriptional activator Pointed (Pnt) triggers cellular senescence and blocks Ras-induced tumor growth, revealing a mechanism of tumor progression involving microRNA-mediated inhibition of Pnt.
The activation of Ras signaling is a major early event of oncogenesis in many contexts, yet paradoxically, Ras signaling induces cellular senescence, which prevents tumorigenesis. Thus, Ras-activated cells must overcome senescence to develop into cancer. Through a genetic screen in Drosophila melanogaster, we found that the ETS family transcriptional activator Pointed (Pnt) was necessary and sufficient to trigger cellular senescence upon Ras activation and blocked Ras-induced tumor growth in eye-antennal discs. Through analyses of mosaic discs using various genetic tools, we identified a mechanism of tumor progression in which loss of cell polarity, a common driver of epithelial oncogenesis, abrogated Ras-induced cellular senescence through microRNA-mediated inhibition of Pnt. Mechanistically, polarity defects in Ras-activated cells caused activation of the Hippo effector Yorkie (Yki), which induced the expression of the microRNA bantam. bantam-mediated repression of the E3 ligase-associated protein Tribbles (Trbl) relieved Ras- and Akt-dependent inhibition of the transcription factor FoxO. The restoration of FoxO activity in Ras-activated cells induced the expression of the microRNAs miR-9c and miR-79, which led to reduced pnt expression, thereby abrogating cellular senescence and promoting tumor progression. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation for how Ras-activated tumors progress toward malignancy by overcoming cellular senescence.

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