Literature DB >> 23001183

LIFR is a breast cancer metastasis suppressor upstream of the Hippo-YAP pathway and a prognostic marker.

Dahu Chen1, Yutong Sun, Yongkun Wei, Peijing Zhang, Abdol Hossein Rezaeian, Julie Teruya-Feldstein, Sumeet Gupta, Han Liang, Hui-Kuan Lin, Mien-Chie Hung, Li Ma.   

Abstract

There is a pressing need to identify prognostic markers of metastatic disease and targets for treatment. Combining high-throughput RNA sequencing, functional characterization, mechanistic studies and clinical validation, we identify leukemia inhibitory factor receptor (LIFR) as a breast cancer metastasis suppressor downstream of the microRNA miR-9 and upstream of Hippo signaling. Restoring LIFR expression in highly malignant tumor cells suppresses metastasis by triggering a Hippo kinase cascade that leads to phosphorylation, cytoplasmic retention and functional inactivation of the transcriptional coactivator YES-associated protein (YAP). Conversely, loss of LIFR in nonmetastatic breast cancer cells induces migration, invasion and metastatic colonization through activation of YAP. LIFR is downregulated in human breast carcinomas and inversely correlates with metastasis. Notably, in approximately 1,000 nonmetastatic breast tumors, LIFR expression status correlated with metastasis-free, recurrence-free and overall survival outcomes in the patients. These findings identify LIFR as a metastasis suppressor that functions through the Hippo-YAP pathway and has significant prognostic power.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23001183      PMCID: PMC3684419          DOI: 10.1038/nm.2940

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Med        ISSN: 1078-8956            Impact factor:   53.440


  42 in total

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