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TAZ is indispensable for c-MYC-induced hepatocarcinogenesis

Abstract

Background & aims

Mounting evidence implicates the Hippo downstream effectors Yes-associated protein (YAP) and transcriptional co-activator with PDZ-binding motif (TAZ) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We investigated the functional contribution of YAP and/or TAZ to c-MYC-induced liver tumor development.

Methods

The requirement for YAP and/or TAZ in c-Myc-driven hepatocarcinogenesis was analyzed using conditional Yap, Taz, and Yap;Taz knockout (KO) mice. An hepatocyte-specific inducible TTR-CreERT2 KO system was applied to evaluate the role of YAP and TAZ during tumor progression. Expression patterns of YAP, TAZ, c-MYC, and BCL2L12 were analyzed in human HCC samples.

Results

We found that the Hippo cascade is inactivated in c-Myc-induced mouse HCC. Intriguingly, TAZ mRNA levels and activation status correlated with c-MYC activity in human and mouse HCC, but YAP mRNA levels did not. We demonstrated that TAZ is a direct transcriptional target of c-MYC. In c-Myc induced murine HCCs, ablation of Taz, but not Yap, completely prevented tumor development. Mechanistically, TAZ was required to avoid c-Myc-induced hepatocyte apoptosis during tumor initiation. The anti-apoptotic BCL2L12 gene was identified as a novel target regulated specifically by YAP/TAZ, whose silencing strongly suppressed c-Myc-driven murine hepatocarcinogenesis. In c-Myc murine HCC lesions, conditional knockout of Taz, but not Yap, led to tumor regression, supporting the requirement of TAZ for c-Myc-driven HCC progression.

Conclusions

TAZ is a pivotal player at the crossroad between the c-MYC and Hippo pathways in HCC. Targeting TAZ might be beneficial for the treatment of patients with HCC and c-MYC activation.

Lay summary

The identification of novel treatment targets and approaches for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma is crucial to improve survival outcomes. We identified TAZ as a transcriptional target of c-MYC which plays a critical role in c-MYC-dependent hepatocarcinogenesis. TAZ could potentially be targeted for the treatment of patients with c-MYC-driven hepatocellular carcinoma.

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