YAP gene fusions cause cancer
To determine if YAP gene fusions cause cancer, Dr. Frank Szulzewsky, the postdoctoral fellow in Holland’s lab who spearheaded the project, examined whether four different YAP gene fusions could cause brain tumors.
YAP gene fusions are found in about 25%-30% of ependymomas, a rare type of central nervous system cancer. Only 60%-65% of people with this cancer survive for at least five years after diagnosis. These tumors often have few other mutations, but it wasn’t known for sure that the YAP gene fusions were the critical genetic drivers of tumor formation and progression. Understanding this is key to understanding whether YAP may be an effective treatment target in these cancers.
Szulzewsky found that brain tumors formed in the presence of each YAP gene fusion, and that genetically blocking the activity of the fusions prevented tumor development, suggesting that YAP gene fusions do indeed cause cancer.
But YAP has many potential functions within the cell, and only some of those contribute to cancer development. The fact that YAP is found fused to several different partners provided the researchers with an opportunity.
“We have enough fusions to really figure out the parts that matter, the important parts of YAP’s function,” Holland said. “Because [the gene fusions] have to maintain certain functions of YAP and lose other things [in order to promote cancer].”
When Szulzewsky compared the different gene fusions, he saw shared characteristics: Each gene fusion produced a fusion protein that was always “on” — able to get into the nucleus and work with molecular partners to turn growth-promoting genes on. And, they couldn’t be turned off — each fusion had lost the section of YAP that cells use to flag it to be broken down and taken out of circulation.
Working with systems biologist and Hutch Human Biology colleague Dr. Taran Gujral, Szulzewsky tested the effect of experimental compounds that block YAP protein activity on the growth of tumor cells harboring YAP gene fusions. Treatment with these compounds, he found, slowed the growth of these cancer cells in lab dishes.
Because many molecular players involved in regulating YAP activity have been implicated in cancer, scientists have begun testing the effectiveness of anti-YAP drugs in patients with cancer. One of the experimental drugs Szulzewksy tested, called verteporfin, is currently being tested against breast cancer in clinical trials. The current work suggests that tumors carrying YAP fusions, like many ependymomas, may also be susceptible to similar compounds.
Pursuing anti-YAP drugs
The team is continuing to pursue potential new drugs with anti-YAP activity. They’re also widening their net to see if any of the other genes turned on by YAP could be therapeutic targets, Holland said. With Gujral, they’re also seeking drugs that could synergize with anti-YAP drugs to be even more beneficial.
Funded by the Ivy Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to finding treatments for brain cancer, the team is also collaborating with the National Institutes of Health, which will help bring any promising drugs that Holland’s team finds to clinical trials.
"There are several examples of tumors with gene fusions responding to targeted therapy against the fusion partners, while tumor without the fusions do not. In this study we may have found another instance, and identified the tumors that would respond to drugs targeting Yap activity," Holland said.
This work was funded by the NIH and the Ivy Foundation..