4.6 Review

An Updated Understanding of the Role of YAP in Driving Oncogenic Responses

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13123100

Keywords

cancer; YAP; Hippo pathway; targeted therapies; immunity

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Association for Cancer Research [AIRC: IG-19803, AIRC: IG-23670]
  2. AROSE, Progetti di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale [PRIN2017E5L5P3]
  3. University of Ferrara
  4. Progetti di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale [PRIN20177E9EPY]
  5. Italian Ministry of Health [GR-2013-02356747]
  6. European Research Council [853057-InflaPML]

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In 2020, there were 19.3 million new cancer cases worldwide. YAP, a key protein driving oncogenic response, has emerged as a potent oncogene, regulating processes such as cell transformation, tumor growth, migration, metastasis, and immune-cancer cell interactions. YAP's fine regulation and potential novel anticancer treatment opportunities make it a promising target for cancer therapy.
Simple Summary In 2020, the global cancer database GLOBOCAN estimated 19.3 million new cancer cases worldwide. The discovery of targeted therapies may help prognosis and outcome of the patients affected, but the understanding of the plethora of highly interconnected pathways that modulate cell transformation, proliferation, invasion, migration and survival remains an ambitious goal. Here we propose an updated state of the art of YAP as the key protein driving oncogenic response via promoting all those steps at multiple levels. Of interest, the role of YAP in immunosuppression is a field of evolving research and growing interest and this summary about the current pharmacological therapies impacting YAP serves as starting point for future studies. Yes-associated protein (YAP) has emerged as a key component in cancer signaling and is considered a potent oncogene. As such, nuclear YAP participates in complex and only partially understood molecular cascades that are responsible for the oncogenic response by regulating multiple processes, including cell transformation, tumor growth, migration, and metastasis, and by acting as an important mediator of immune and cancer cell interactions. YAP is finely regulated at multiple levels, and its localization in cells in terms of cytoplasm-nucleus shuttling (and vice versa) sheds light on interesting novel anticancer treatment opportunities and putative unconventional functions of the protein when retained in the cytosol. This review aims to summarize and present the state of the art knowledge about the role of YAP in cancer signaling, first focusing on how YAP differs from WW domain-containing transcription regulator 1 (WWTR1, also named as TAZ) and which upstream factors regulate it; then, this review focuses on the role of YAP in different cancer stages and in the crosstalk between immune and cancer cells as well as growing translational strategies derived from its inhibitory and synergistic effects with existing chemo-, immuno- and radiotherapies.

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