Targeting Hippo pathway by specific interruption of YAP-TEAD interaction using cyclic YAP-like peptides

  • Zheng Zhou*
  • , Taishan Hu
  • , Zhiheng Xu
  • , Zhaohu Lin
  • , Zhisen Zhang
  • , Teng Feng
  • , Liangcheng Zhu
  • , Yiping Rong
  • , Hong Shen
  • , John M. Luk
  • , Xiongwen Zhang
  • , Ning Qin
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

129 Scopus citations

Abstract

Hippo signaling pathway is emerging as a novel target for anticancer therapy because it plays key roles in organ size control and tumorigenesis. As the downstream effectors, Yes-associated protein (YAP)-transcriptional enhancer activation domain family member (TEAD) association is essential for YAP-driven oncogenic activity, while TEAD is largely dispensable for normal tissue growth. We present the design of YAP-like peptides (17mer) to occupy the interface 3 on TEAD. Introducing cysteines at YAP sites 87 and 96 can induce disulfide formation, as confirmed by crystallography. The engineered peptide significantly improves the potency in disrupting YAP-TEAD interaction in vitro. To confirm that blocking YAP-TEAD complex formation by directly targeting on TEAD is a valid approach, we report a significant reduction in tumor growth rate in a hepatocellular carcinoma xenograft model after introducing the dominant-negative mutation (Y406H) of TEAD1 to abolish YAP-TEAD interaction. Our results suggest that targeting TEAD is a promising strategy against YAP-induced oncogenesis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)724-732
Number of pages9
JournalFASEB Journal
Volume29
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Disulfide cyclization
  • HCC xenograft
  • TEAD-YAP crystal structure

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