The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Cervical cancer is caused by the persistent infection of human papilloma virus (HPV) in the cervix epithelium. Although effective preventative care is available, the widespread nature of infection and the variety of HPV strains unprotecte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nguyen, Hoa Bich
Other Authors: Quilliam, Lawrence
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Yap
NF2
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/3627
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-36272019-05-10T15:21:13Z The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development Nguyen, Hoa Bich Quilliam, Lawrence Brutkiewicz, Randy R. Harrington, Maureen A. Kapur, Reuben Wells, Clark D. Cervical cancer Yap LKB1 HPV-E6 NF2 tissue structure Papillomaviruses -- Research Cervix uteri -- Cancer Tumor suppressor proteins Cells -- Growth -- Regulation Cell proliferation -- Research Papillomavirus vaccines Phosphorylation Transcription factors Dysplasia Keratinocytes -- Differentiation Cancer cells -- Research Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Cervical cancer is caused by the persistent infection of human papilloma virus (HPV) in the cervix epithelium. Although effective preventative care is available, the widespread nature of infection and the variety of HPV strains unprotected by HPV vaccines necessitate a better understanding of the disease for development of new therapies. A major tumor suppressing mechanism is the inhibition of cell division by tissue structure; however, the underlining molecular circuitry for this regulation remains unclear. Recently, the Yap transcriptional co-activator has emerged as a key growth promoter that mediates contact growth arrest and limits organ size. Thus, we aimed to uncover upstream signals that connect tissue organization to Yap regulation in the inhibition of cervical cancer. Two events that disrupt tissue structure were examined including the loss of the tumor suppressor LKB1 and the expression of the viral oncogene HPV16-E6. We identified that Yap mediates cell growth regulation downstream of both LKB1 and E6. Restoration of LKB1 expression in HeLa cervical cancer cells, which lack this tumor suppressor, or shRNA knockdown of LKB1 in NTERT immortalized normal human dermal keratinocytes, demonstrated that LKB1 promotes Yap phosphorylation, nuclear exclusion, and proteasomal degradation. The ability of phosphorylation-defective Yap mutants to rescue LKB1 phenotypes, such as reduced cell proliferation and cell size, suggest that Yap inhibition contributes to LKB1 tumor suppressor function(s). Interestingly, LKB1’s suppression of Yap activity required neither the canonical Yap kinases, Lats1/2, nor metabolic downstream targets of LKB1, AMPK and mTORC1. Instead, the scaffolding protein NF2 was required for LKB1 to induce a specific actin cytoskeleton structure that associates with Yap suppression. Meanwhile, HPV16-E6 promoted Yap activation in all stages of keratinocyte differentiation. E6 activated the Rap1 small GTPase, which in turn promoted Yap activity. Since Rap1 does not mediate differentiation inhibition caused by E6, E6 may play a role in promoting cell growth through Rap1-Yap activation rather than preventing growth arrest through the disruption of differentiation. Altogether, the LKB1-NF2-Yap and E6-Rap1-Yap pathways represent two examples of a novel phenomenon, whereby the structure of a cell directly influences its gene expression and proliferation. 2013-10-07T19:46:10Z 2014-10-08T09:30:25Z 2013-10-07 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/3627 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cervical cancer
Yap
LKB1
HPV-E6
NF2
tissue structure
Papillomaviruses -- Research
Cervix uteri -- Cancer
Tumor suppressor proteins
Cells -- Growth -- Regulation
Cell proliferation -- Research
Papillomavirus vaccines
Phosphorylation
Transcription factors
Dysplasia
Keratinocytes -- Differentiation
Cancer cells -- Research
spellingShingle Cervical cancer
Yap
LKB1
HPV-E6
NF2
tissue structure
Papillomaviruses -- Research
Cervix uteri -- Cancer
Tumor suppressor proteins
Cells -- Growth -- Regulation
Cell proliferation -- Research
Papillomavirus vaccines
Phosphorylation
Transcription factors
Dysplasia
Keratinocytes -- Differentiation
Cancer cells -- Research
Nguyen, Hoa Bich
The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Cervical cancer is caused by the persistent infection of human papilloma virus (HPV) in the cervix epithelium. Although effective preventative care is available, the widespread nature of infection and the variety of HPV strains unprotected by HPV vaccines necessitate a better understanding of the disease for development of new therapies. A major tumor suppressing mechanism is the inhibition of cell division by tissue structure; however, the underlining molecular circuitry for this regulation remains unclear. Recently, the Yap transcriptional co-activator has emerged as a key growth promoter that mediates contact growth arrest and limits organ size. Thus, we aimed to uncover upstream signals that connect tissue organization to Yap regulation in the inhibition of cervical cancer. Two events that disrupt tissue structure were examined including the loss of the tumor suppressor LKB1 and the expression of the viral oncogene HPV16-E6. We identified that Yap mediates cell growth regulation downstream of both LKB1 and E6. Restoration of LKB1 expression in HeLa cervical cancer cells, which lack this tumor suppressor, or shRNA knockdown of LKB1 in NTERT immortalized normal human dermal keratinocytes, demonstrated that LKB1 promotes Yap phosphorylation, nuclear exclusion, and proteasomal degradation. The ability of phosphorylation-defective Yap mutants to rescue LKB1 phenotypes, such as reduced cell proliferation and cell size, suggest that Yap inhibition contributes to LKB1 tumor suppressor function(s). Interestingly, LKB1’s suppression of Yap activity required neither the canonical Yap kinases, Lats1/2, nor metabolic downstream targets of LKB1, AMPK and mTORC1. Instead, the scaffolding protein NF2 was required for LKB1 to induce a specific actin cytoskeleton structure that associates with Yap suppression. Meanwhile, HPV16-E6 promoted Yap activation in all stages of keratinocyte differentiation. E6 activated the Rap1 small GTPase, which in turn promoted Yap activity. Since Rap1 does not mediate differentiation inhibition caused by E6, E6 may play a role in promoting cell growth through Rap1-Yap activation rather than preventing growth arrest through the disruption of differentiation. Altogether, the LKB1-NF2-Yap and E6-Rap1-Yap pathways represent two examples of a novel phenomenon, whereby the structure of a cell directly influences its gene expression and proliferation.
author2 Quilliam, Lawrence
author_facet Quilliam, Lawrence
Nguyen, Hoa Bich
author Nguyen, Hoa Bich
author_sort Nguyen, Hoa Bich
title The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
title_short The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
title_full The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
title_fullStr The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
title_full_unstemmed The tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
title_sort tumor suppressing roles of tissue structure in cervical cancer development
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/3627
work_keys_str_mv AT nguyenhoabich thetumorsuppressingrolesoftissuestructureincervicalcancerdevelopment
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