4.8 Article

Hippo-mediated suppression of IRS2/AKT signaling prevents hepatic steatosis and liver cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 128, Issue 3, Pages 1010-1025

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI95802

Keywords

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Funding

  1. KAIST of the Korea Mouse Phenotyping Project [NRF-2014 M3A9D5A01073556]
  2. National Creative Research Initiatives [NRF-2010-0018277, NRF-2011-0018305]
  3. Korea Mouse Phenotyping Project [NRF-2014 M3A9D5A01075128]
  4. TJ Park Science Fellowship of the POSCO TJ Park Foundation

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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a major risk factor for liver cancer; therefore, its prevention is an important clinical goal. Ablation of phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) or the protein kinase Hippo signaling pathway induces liver cancer via activation of AKT or the transcriptional regulators YAP/TAZ, respectively; however, the potential for crosstalk between the PTEN/AKT and Hippo/YAP/TAZ pathways in liver tumorigenesis has thus far remained unclear. Here, we have shown that deletion of both PTEN and SAV1 in the liver accelerates the development of NAFLD and liver cancer in mice. At the molecular level, activation of YAP/TAZ in the liver of Pten(-/-)Savl(-/-)mice amplified AKT signaling through the upregulation of insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS2) expression. Both ablation of YAP/TAZ and activation of the Hippo pathway could rescue these phenotypes. A high level of YAP/TAZ expression was associated with a high level of IRS2 expression in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Moreover, treatment with the AKT inhibitor MK-2206 or knockout of IRS2 by AAV-Cas9 successfully repressed liver tumorigenesis in Pten(-/-) Sav1(-/-) mice. Thus, our findings suggest that Hippo signaling interacts with AKT signaling by regulating IRS2 expression to prevent NAFLD and liver cancer progression and provide evidence that impaired crosstalk between these 2 pathways accelerates NAFLD and liver cancer.

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