| Literature DB >> 34453890 |
Fansen Meng1, Zhengyang Yu2, Dan Zhang3, Shasha Chen4, Hongxin Guan5, Ruyuan Zhou6, Qirou Wu2, Qian Zhang6, Shengduo Liu3, Mukesh Kumar Venkat Ramani7, Bing Yang2, Xiao-Qun Ba8, Jing Zhang8, Jun Huang2, Xueli Bai9, Jun Qin10, Xin-Hua Feng11, Songying Ouyang5, Yan Jessie Zhang7, Tingbo Liang12, Pinglong Xu13.
Abstract
Missense mutations of the tumor suppressor Neurofibromin 2 (NF2/Merlin/schwannomin) result in sporadic to frequent occurrences of tumorigenesis in multiple organs. However, the underlying pathogenicity of NF2-related tumorigenesis remains mostly unknown. Here we found that NF2 facilitated innate immunity by regulating YAP/TAZ-mediated TBK1 inhibition. Unexpectedly, patient-derived individual mutations in the FERM domain of NF2 (NF2m) converted NF2 into a potent suppressor of cGAS-STING signaling. Mechanistically, NF2m gained extreme associations with IRF3 and TBK1 and, upon innate nucleic acid sensing, was directly induced by the activated IRF3 to form cellular condensates, which contained the PP2A complex, to eliminate TBK1 activation. Accordingly, NF2m robustly suppressed STING-initiated antitumor immunity in cancer cell-autonomous and -nonautonomous murine models, and NF2m-IRF3 condensates were evident in human vestibular schwannomas. Our study reports phase separation-mediated quiescence of cGAS-STING signaling by a mutant tumor suppressor and reveals gain-of-function pathogenesis for NF2-related tumors by regulating antitumor immunity.Entities:
Keywords: Hippo-YAP; IRF3; NF2; TBK1; antitumor immunity; cGAS-STING; innate immunity; liquid-liquid phase separation; schwannomas; tumor suppressor
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34453890 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.07.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970