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CCN-Hippo YAP signaling in vision and its role in neuronal, glial and vascular cell function and behavior

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL COMMUNICATION AND SIGNALING
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 255-262

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12079-023-00759-6

Keywords

CCN1; CCN2; YAP; Hippo; Blood vessels; Neurogenesis; Gliogenesis; Angiogenesis; Retina

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The retina, consisting of neurons, glia, and vascular and epithelial cells, transmits visual signals to the brain through a complex network. The extracellular matrix (ECM) in the retina plays a crucial role in shaping the structural environment and regulating cell function and tissue homeostasis. The ECM-derived cues and intracellular signaling pathways, such as the CCN-Hippo-YAP regulatory axis, have significant impacts on retina development, function, and diseases.
The retina is a highly specialized tissue composed of a network of neurons, glia, and vascular and epithelial cells; all working together to coordinate and transduce visual signals to the brain. The retinal extracellular matrix (ECM) shapes the structural environment in the retina but also supplies resident cells with proper chemical and mechanical signals to regulate cell function and behavior and maintain tissue homeostasis. As such, the ECM affects virtually all aspects of retina development, function and pathology. ECM-derived regulatory cues influence intracellular signaling and cell function. Reversibly, changes in intracellular signaling programs result in alteration of the ECM and downstream ECM-mediated signaling network. Our functional studies in vitro, genetic studies in mice, and multi omics analyses have provided evidence that a subset of ECM proteins referred to as cellular communication network (CCN) affects several aspects of retinal neuronal and vascular development and function. Retinal progenitor, glia and vascular cells are major sources of CCN proteins particularly CCN1 and CCN2. We found that expression of the CCN1 and CCN2 genes is dependent on the activity of YAP, the core component of the hippo-YAP signaling pathway. Central to the Hippo pathway is a conserved cascade of inhibitory kinases that regulate the activity of YAP, the final transducer of this pathway. Reversibly, YAP expression and/or activity is dependent on CCN1 and CCN2 downstream signaling, which creates a positive or negative feedforward loop driving developmental processes (e.g., neurogenesis, gliogenesis, angiogenesis, barriergenesis) and, when dysregulated, disease progression in a range of retinal neurovascular disorders. Here we describe mechanistic hints involving the CCN-Hippo-YAP regulatory axis in retina development and function. This regulatory pathway represents an opportunity for targeted therapies in neurovascular and neurodegenerative diseases.{GRAPHIACAL ABSTRACT}

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