Dysregulated SASS6 expression promotes increased ciliogenesis and cell invasion phenotypes
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Hargreaves, Eleanor; Collinson, Rebecca; Jenks, Andrew D.; Staszewski, Adina; Tsalikis, Athanasios; Bodoque, Raquel; Arias-García, Mar; Abdi, Yasmin; Al-Malki, Abdulaziz; Yuan, Yinyin; Natrajan, Rachael; Haider, Syed; Iskratsch, Thomas; Wang, Won-Jing; Goinho, Susana; Palaskas, Nicolaos J.; Calvo González, Fernando
; Vivanco, Igor; Zech, Tobias; [et al.]Fecha
2025Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
Life Science Alliance, 2026, 8(10), e202402820
Editorial
Life Science Alliance, LLC
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Resumen/Abstract
Centriole and/or cilium defects are characteristic of cancer cells and have been linked to cancer cell invasion. However, the mechanistic bases of this regulation remain incompletely understood. Spindle assembly abnormal protein 6 homolog (SAS-6) is essential for centriole biogenesis and cilium formation. SAS-6 levels decrease at the end of mitosis and G1, resulting from APCCdh1-targeted degradation. To examine the biological consequences of unrestrained SAS-6 expression, we used a nondegradable SAS-6 mutant (SAS-6ND). This led to an increase in ciliation and cell invasion and caused an up-regulation of the YAP/TAZ pathway. SAS-6ND expression resulted in cell morphology changes, nuclear deformation, and YAP translocation to the nucleus, resulting in increased TEAD-dependent transcription. SAS-6-mediated invasion was prevented by YAP down-regulation or by blocking ciliogenesis. Similarly, down-regulation of SAS-6 in DMS273, a highly invasive and highly ciliated lung cancer cell line that overexpresses SAS-6, completely blocked cell invasion and depleted YAP protein levels. Thus, our data provide evidence for a defined role of SAS-6 in cell invasion through the activation of the YAP/TAZ pathway.
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