Abstract

BackgroundFocal adhesion plays an essential role in tumour invasiveness and metastasis. Hippo component YAP has been widely reported to be involved in many aspects of tumour biology. However, its role in focal adhesion regulation in breast cancer remains unexplored.MethodsTissue microarray was used to evaluate YAP expression in clinical breast cancer specimens by immunohistochemical staining. Cell migration and invasion abilities were measured by Transwell assay. A cell adhesion assay was used to measure the ability of cell adhesion to gelatin. The focal adhesion was visualized through immunofluorescence. Phosphorylated FAK and other proteins were detected by Western blot analysis. Gene expression profiling was used to screen differently expressed genes, and gene ontology enrichment was performed using DAVID software. The gene mRNA levels were measured by quantitative real-time PCR. The activity of the THBS1-promoter was evaluated by dual luciferase assay. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) was used to verify whether YAP could bind to the THBS1-promoter region. The prediction of potential protein-interaction was performed with the String program. The ChIP sequence data of TEAD was obtained from the ENCODE database and analysed via the ChIP-seek tool. The gene expression dataset (GSE30480) of purified tumour cells from primary breast tumour tissues and metastatic lymph nodes was used in the gene set enrichment analysis. Prognostic analysis of the TCGA dataset was performed by the SurvExpress program. Gene expression correlation of the TCGA dataset was analysed via R2: Genomics Analysis and Visualization Platform.ResultsOur study provides evidence that YAP acts as a promoter of focal adhesion and tumour invasiveness via regulating FAK phosphorylation in breast cancer. Further experiments reveal that YAP could induce FAK phosphorylation through a TEAD-dependent manner. Using gene expression profiling and bioinformatics analysis, we identify the FAK upstream gene, thrombospondin 1, as a direct transcriptional target of YAP-TEAD. Silencing THBS1 could reverse the YAP-induced FAK activation and focal adhesion.ConclusionOur results unveil a new signal axis, YAP/THBS1/FAK, in the modulation of cell adhesion and invasiveness, and provides new insights into the crosstalk between Hippo signalling and focal adhesion.

Highlights

  • Focal adhesion plays an essential role in tumour invasiveness and metastasis

  • Yes-associated protein (YAP) overexpression and activation were associated with lymphatic metastasis and poor prognosis in breast cancer patients To validate the relationship between YAP expression and metastasis in breast cancer patients, a paraffin-embedded tissue array containing 104 paired primary/lymphatic metastatic clinical breast cancer specimens was obtained

  • Gene set enrichment analysis was performed on a gene expression profile of purified tumour cells from 14 primary breast tumours and 6 metastatic lymph nodes that was available from the GSE database (GSE30480, [30])

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Summary

Introduction

Focal adhesion plays an essential role in tumour invasiveness and metastasis. Its role in focal adhesion regulation in breast cancer remains unexplored. Cell-ECM crosstalk plays a key role in regulating tumour cell motility and invasiveness through numerous cellular biomechanics, such as focal adhesion, membrane remodelling, actin protrusion, actomyosin contraction, and cell motility signalling pathways [4]. Focal adhesion has been revealed to be a crucial determinant of cell migration and plays an important role in promoting tumour cell invasion [5]. As a key regulator of FA, FAK plays an oncogenic role in a wide range of human cancers [11]. The significance of focal adhesion and FAK in breast malignancy metastasis has been widely reported, it is still unclear how FA is regulated in tumour progression

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