Publication date: Available online 31 August 2017
Source:Developmental Cell
Author(s): Xiaohong Wang, Aida Freire Valls, Géza Schermann, Ying Shen, Ivan M. Moya, Laura Castro, Severino Urban, Gergely M. Solecki, Frank Winkler, Lars Riedemann, Rakesh K. Jain, Massimilano Mazzone, Thomas Schmidt, Tamás Fischer, Georg Halder, Carmen Ruiz de Almodóvar
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a major driver of blood vessel formation. However, the signal transduction pathways culminating in the biological consequences of VEGF signaling are only partially understood. Here, we show that the Hippo pathway effectors YAP and TAZ work as crucial signal transducers to mediate VEGF-VEGFR2 signaling during angiogenesis. We demonstrate that YAP/TAZ are essential for vascular development as endothelium-specific deletion of YAP/TAZ leads to impaired vascularization and embryonic lethality. Mechanistically, we show that VEGF activates YAP/TAZ via its effects on actin cytoskeleton and that activated YAP/TAZ induce a transcriptional program to further control cytoskeleton dynamics and thus establish a feedforward loop that ensures a proper angiogenic response. Lack of YAP/TAZ also results in altered cellular distribution of VEGFR2 due to trafficking defects from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane. Altogether, our study identifies YAP/TAZ as central mediators of VEGF signaling and therefore as important regulators of angiogenesis.
Graphical abstract
Teaser
Wang et al. identify YAP/TAZ as essential co-transcription factors in endothelial cells during developmental angiogenesis. They describe that YAP/TAZ are activated by VEGF and that their activity is needed for transducing the VEGF signal into a specific transcriptional program, required for a full angiogenic response.http://ift.tt/2wnwrQl
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου