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Fluid shear stress activates YAP1 to promote cancer cell motilityopen access

Authors
Lee, Hyun JungDiaz, Miguel F.Price, Katherine M.Ozuna, Joyce A.Zhang, SonglinSevick-Muraca, Eva M.Hagan, John P.Wenzel, Pamela L.
Issue Date
Jan-2017
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.8
Journal Title
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume
8
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/64065
DOI
10.1038/ncomms14122
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
Mechanical stress is pervasive in egress routes of malignancy, yet the intrinsic effects of force on tumour cells remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that frictional force characteristic of flow in the lymphatics stimulates YAP1 to drive cancer cell migration; whereas intensities of fluid wall shear stress (WSS) typical of venous or arterial flow inhibit taxis. YAP1, but not TAZ, is strictly required for WSS-enhanced cell movement, as blockade of YAP1, TEAD1-4 or the YAP1-TEAD interaction reduces cellular velocity to levels observed without flow. Silencing of TEAD phenocopies loss of YAP1, implicating transcriptional transactivation function in mediating force-enhanced cell migration. WSS dictates expression of a network of YAP1 effectors with executive roles in invasion, chemotaxis and adhesion downstream of the ROCK-LIMK-cofilin signalling axis. Altogether, these data implicate YAP1 as a fluid mechanosensor that functions to regulate genes that promote metastasis.
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