| Literature DB >> 35602596 |
Sheng-Chieh Hsu1,2, Ching-Yu Lin1, Yen-Yi Lin2, Colin C Collins2, Chia-Lin Chen1,2, Hsing-Jien Kung1,3,4,5.
Abstract
TEAD4 (TEA Domain Transcription Factor 4) is well recognized as the DNA-anchor protein of YAP transcription complex, which is modulated by Hippo, a highly conserved pathway in Metazoa that controls organ size through regulating cell proliferation and apoptosis. To acquire full transcriptional activity, TEAD4 requires co-activator, YAP (Yes-associated protein) or its homolog TAZ (transcriptional coactivator with PDZ-binding motif) the signaling hub that relays the extracellular stimuli to the transcription of target genes. Growing evidence suggests that TEAD4 also exerts its function in a YAP-independent manner through other signal pathways. Although TEAD4 plays an essential role in determining that differentiation fate of the blastocyst, it also promotes tumorigenesis by enhancing metastasis, cancer stemness, and drug resistance. Upregulation of TEAD4 has been reported in several cancers, including colon cancer, gastric cancer, breast cancer, and prostate cancer and serves as a valuable prognostic marker. Recent studies show that TEAD4, but not other members of the TEAD family, engages in regulating mitochondrial dynamics and cell metabolism by modulating the expression of mitochondrial- and nuclear-encoded electron transport chain genes. TEAD4's functions including oncogenic activities are tightly controlled by its subcellular localization. As a predominantly nuclear protein, its cytoplasmic translocation is triggered by several signals, such as osmotic stress, cell confluency, and arginine availability. Intriguingly, TEAD4 is also localized in mitochondria, although the translocation mechanism remains unclear. In this report, we describe the current understanding of TEAD4 as an oncogene, epigenetic regulator and mitochondrial modulator. The contributing mechanisms will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Tead4; cancer; epigenetics; mitochondria; oxphos
Year: 2022 PMID: 35602596 PMCID: PMC9117765 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.890419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Schematic illustration of TEAD4’s functional domains. TEA domain (38–105) is named after TEF-1 and abaA, both of which contain this domain for DNA binding. The basic amino acids (highlighted in red) are crucial for TEAD4 nuclear translocation. YBD, YAP-binding domain (222–431). S322 is the serine residue for phosphorylation. C360 is the cysteine residue for palmitoylation. YAP, TAZ and VGLL4 are transcription factors which bind YAP domain.
FIGURE 2TEAD4 upstream signals (YAP-dependent). Once the Hippo pathway is inactivated, the nuclear translocation of YAP can be modulated by several signaling pathways, including HGF induced β-catenin pathway, TGFβ-induced SMAD pathway and Ephrin A2 induced Rho-dependent pathway. Several antiviral associated pathways also can modulate YAP nuclear translocation or its binding activity of TEAD4.
FIGURE 3TEAD4 upstream signals (YAP-independent). Once the Hippo pathway is activated by signals (such as environmental stress or extracellular contacts), YAP is phosphorylated and restrained in cytosol. VGLL4 can act as YAP antagonist and TEAD4 coactivator as well. The nuclear glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and PGC1α can directly bind to TEAD4 in a YAP-independent manner. mTOR and p38 signaling are involved in nuclear retention and cytosolic translocation of TEAD4.
FIGURE 4List of OXPHOS loci which contain TEAD4 peaks based on ChIP-seq results from the ENCODE Transcription Factors Targets dataset.
TEADs overexpression and clinical relevance in various cancer types.
| TEADs | Cancer Type | Clinical Association | Signals and Its Oncogenic Targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TEAD1 | Melanoma | Poor prognosis | - |
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| Prostate cancer | Lower survival rate | - |
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| Renal cell carcinoma | Tumor growth, migration | YAP/TEAD1/CTGF/MYC/EDN1/EDN2 |
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| Thyroid cancer | Tumorigenesis | YAP/TEAD1/Ras/MEK/ERK |
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| TEAD2 | Liver cancer | Lower survival rate and poor prognosis | TEAD2/VGLL4/EMT |
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| Ovarian serous carcinoma | Lower survival rate and progression-free survival | - |
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| TEAD3 | Liver cancer | Higher overall survival | - |
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| Pancreatic Cancer | Poor prognosis | - |
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| Renal cell carcinoma | - | SAV↓/YAP1↑/TEAD3↑ |
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| TEAD4 | Bladder cancer | Induction of EMT, poor prognosis | TEAD4/CDH1/CDH2/FN1/TWIST1/2 |
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| Bladder cancer | Poor prognosis | - |
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| Breast cancer | - |
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| Breast cancer | Metastasis, recurrence | TEAD4/KLF5/p27 |
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| Breast cancer | Poor prognosis | GR/TEAD4/CDH2/ANKRD1/BIRC5 |
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| Colorectal cancer | Metastasis, poor prognosis | TEAD4/SIX1/CDH1 |
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| Colorectal cancer | Metastasis, poor prognosis | TEAD4/CDH1/VIM |
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| Colorectal cancer | Poor prognosis | YAP/TEAD4/RANBP1 |
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| Esophageal Cancer | Tumor growth, migration, invasion | YAP1/TEAD4/SGK1/MMP2/MMP9 |
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| Gastric cancer | Poor prognosis | TEAD4/ADM/ANG/ARID5B/CALD1/EDN2/FSCN1/OSR2 |
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| Gliomas | Poor prognosis |
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| Head neck squamous cell carcinoma | Induction of EMT | TGFb/TEAD4/CDH1/CDH2/VIM/SNAI1 |
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| Liver cancer | Poor prognosis | YAP/TEAD4/Jag-1/Hes-1 |
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| Liver cancer | Tumor growth | TEAD4/HSPA6/HSPA1A |
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| Lung cancer | Poor prognosis | TEAD4/PKM2/HIF1a |
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| Melanoma | Poor prognosis | - |
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| Ovarian cancer | Poor prognosis | YAP/TEAD4/CDH1/SNAI1 |
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| Ovarian cancer | Metastasis, poor prognosis | TEAD4/RPS27A/RPS2 |
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| Ovarian cancer, fallopian tube carcinoma | - | - |
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| Prostate cancer | Lower survival rate and tumor recurrence | mTOR/TEAD4/KATS/OXPHOS |
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| Renal cell carcinoma | Tumor grade and lower survival | - |
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| Thyroid cancer | Suppression of tumor progression and metastasis | TEAD4/Wnt3a/CDH1/CDH2/VIM |
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| Lung cancer, colon cancer, neuroblastoma, endometrial cancer | Metastasis | YAP/TEAD4/AP-1/SRC/CDH2/MACF1 |
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| Lung cancer, liver cancer | Metastasis | TEAD4/SMAD3/SNAI2/ITGB3 |
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| TEAD1/4 | Gastric cancer | Poor prognosis | miR-4269↓/miR-377-3p↓/miR-1343-3p↓/TEAD4↑ |
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| TEAD2/4 | Gliomas | Lower survival rate | TAZ/TEAD2/mesenchymal genes |
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| TEAD1/3/4 | Ovarian cancer | Chemoresistance | YAP/TEADs/GSK3A/ABCB1 |
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| TEAD1/2/3/4 | Esophageal Cancer | Tumor progression | YAP/TEADs/JNK/c-Jun/IRS2 |
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FIGURE 5Transcriptomic profiles of TEAD4 in various cancers. (A) In the Pan-Cancer analysis (ICGC/TCGA, Nature 2020), 6% of samples possess TEAD4 abnormality. (B) Most common alteration is gene amplification found in ovarian cancer, non-small cell lung cancer, and pancreatic cancer. In ovarian cancer, 20% of tumors contain TEAD4 amplification.
Summary of TEADs inhibitors.
| Drug (brand Name) | Functions | References |
|---|---|---|
| Cyclic YAP-like peptides (Peptide 17 or 10) | Targets YAP’s binding site to TEADs |
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| Super-TDU | Mimicking TEAD4 binding domain (TDU) of VGLL4 and interrupts YAP-TEAD4 interaction |
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| Flufenamic acid (TED-346), Niflumic acid | TEAD palmitate-binding pocket NO effect on YAP/TEAD interaction |
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| Bromofenamic acid | TEAD palmitate-binding pocket YAP-TEAD2 interaction |
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| TED-347 | TEAD palmitate-binding pocket YAP-TEAD interaction |
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| K-975 | TEAD palmitate-binding pocket YAP-TEAD interaction |
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| VT3989 | TEAD palmitate-binding pocket YAP-TEAD interaction |
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| Verteporfin (Visudyne, Norvatis) | Up-regulation of 14-3-3σ sequestering YAP |
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| Dasatinib, Pazopanib | Both induce YAP phosphorylation. Pazopanib induces YAP degradation |
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| MF-438 | YAP/TAZ degradation |
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| XAV939 | YAP degradation |
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| Cerivastatin | YAP phosphorylation |
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| CA3 | Inhibits YAP expression |
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| C19 | Activates MST1 and LATS1/2 |
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| BET151 (BET inhibitor) +Panobinostat (HDAC inhibitor) | Downmodulates AKT and YAP signaling pathways |
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