ABSTRACT The skin is a squamous epithelium that is continuously renewed by a population of basal layer stem/progenitor cells and can heal wounds. Here, we show that the transcription regulators YAP and TAZ localise to the nucleus in the basal layer of skin and are elevated upon wound healing. Skin-specific deletion of both YAP and TAZ in adult mice slows proliferation of basal layer cells, leads to hair loss and impairs regeneration after wounding. Contact with the basal extracellular matrix and consequent integrin-Src signalling is a key determinant of the nuclear localisation of YAP/TAZ in basal layer cells and in skin tumours. Contact with the basement membrane is lost in differentiating daughter cells, where YAP and TAZ become mostly cytoplasmic. In other types of squamous epithelia and squamous cell carcinomas, a similar control mechanism is present. By contrast, columnar epithelia differentiate an apical domain that recruits CRB3, Merlin (also known as NF2), KIBRA (also known as WWC1) and SAV1 to induce Hippo signalling and retain YAP/TAZ in the cytoplasm despite contact with the basal layer extracellular matrix. When columnar epithelial tumours lose their apical domain and become invasive, YAP/TAZ becomes nuclear and tumour growth becomes sensitive to the Src inhibitor Dasatinib. Summary: In the squamous epithelium of the mouse skin, the transcription factors YAP and TAZ are regulated by integrin-Src signalling, and are required for proliferation of skin stem/progenitor cells.
Integrin signalling regulates YAP and TAZ to control skin homeostasis
A. Elbediwy,Zoé I Vincent-Mistiaen,B. Spencer‐Dene,R. Stone,S. Boeing,S. Wculek,Julia B. Cordero,E. Tan,Rachel A. Ridgway,V. Brunton,E. Sahai,H. Gerhardt,A. Behrens,I. Malanchi,O. Sansom,B. Thompson
Published 2016 in Development
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Development
- Publication date
2016-05-15
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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