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WASH activation controls endosomal recycling and EGFR and Hippo signaling during tumor-suppressive cell competition.

Dan LiuVasilios TsarouhasChristos Samakovlis
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Cell competition is a conserved homeostatic mechanism whereby epithelial cells eliminate neighbors with lower fitness. Cell communication at the interface of wild-type "winner" cells and polarity-deficient (scrib -/- ) "losers" is established through Sas-mediated Ptp10D activation in polarity-deficient cells. This tumor-suppressive cell competition restrains EGFR and Hippo signaling and enables Eiger-JNK mediated apoptosis in scrib -/- clones. Here, we show that the activation state of the endosomal actin regulator WASH is a central node linking EGFR and Hippo signaling activation. The tyrosine kinase Btk29A and its substrate WASH are required downstream of Ptp10D for "loser" cell elimination. Constitutively active, phosphomimetic WASH is sufficient to induce both EGFR and Yki activation leading to overgrowth. On the mechanistic level we show that Ptp10D is recycled by the WASH/retromer complex, while EGFR is recycled by the WASH/retriever complex. Constitutive WASH activation selectively interferes with retromer function leading to Ptp10D mistargeting while promoting EGFR recycling and signaling activation. Phospho-WASH also activates aberrant Arp2/3 actin polymerization, leading to cytoskeletal imbalance, Yki activation and reduced apoptosis. Selective manipulation of WASH phosphorylation on sorting endosomes may restrict epithelial tumorous growth.
Keyphrases
  • tyrosine kinase
  • epidermal growth factor receptor
  • small cell lung cancer
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • stem cells
  • physical activity
  • body composition
  • signaling pathway