An allosteric pan-TEAD inhibitor blocks oncogenic YAP/TAZ signaling and overcomes KRAS G12C inhibitor resistance
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Published:2023-06-05
Issue:6
Volume:4
Page:812-828
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ISSN:2662-1347
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Container-title:Nature Cancer
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Cancer
Author:
Hagenbeek Thijs J., Zbieg Jason R., Hafner MarcORCID, Mroue Rana, Lacap Jennifer A., Sodir Nicole M.ORCID, Noland Cameron L., Afghani Shervin, Kishore Ayush, Bhat Kamakoti P., Yao XiaosaiORCID, Schmidt Stephen, Clausen Saundra, Steffek Micah, Lee WendyORCID, Beroza Paul, Martin Scott, Lin Eva, Fong Rina, Di Lello Paola, Kubala Marta H., Yang Michelle N.-Y., Lau Jeffrey T., Chan Emily, Arrazate Alfonso, An Le, Levy Elizabeth, Lorenzo Maria N., Lee Ho-June, Pham Trang H., Modrusan Zora, Zang Richard, Chen Yi-Chen, Kabza Michal, Ahmed Musaddeque, Li Jason, Chang Matthew T., Maddalo Danilo, Evangelista Marie, Ye XinORCID, Crawford James J.ORCID, Dey AnweshaORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe Hippo pathway is a key growth control pathway that is conserved across species. The downstream effectors of the Hippo pathway, YAP (Yes-associated protein) and TAZ (transcriptional coactivator with PDZ-binding motif), are frequently activated in cancers to drive proliferation and survival. Based on the premise that sustained interactions between YAP/TAZ and TEADs (transcriptional enhanced associate domain) are central to their transcriptional activities, we discovered a potent small-molecule inhibitor (SMI), GNE-7883, that allosterically blocks the interactions between YAP/TAZ and all human TEAD paralogs through binding to the TEAD lipid pocket. GNE-7883 effectively reduces chromatin accessibility specifically at TEAD motifs, suppresses cell proliferation in a variety of cell line models and achieves strong antitumor efficacy in vivo. Furthermore, we uncovered that GNE-7883 effectively overcomes both intrinsic and acquired resistance to KRAS (Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog) G12C inhibitors in diverse preclinical models through the inhibition of YAP/TAZ activation. Taken together, this work demonstrates the activities of TEAD SMIs in YAP/TAZ-dependent cancers and highlights their potential broad applications in precision oncology and therapy resistance.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
Reference64 articles.
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