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YAP Non-cell-autonomously Promotes Pluripotency Induction in Mouse Cells

Amaleah A. Hartman, S. Maxwell Scalf, Jian Zhang, Xiao Hu, Xinyue Chen, Anna E. Eastman, Cindy Yang, Shangqin Guo

2020Stem Cell Reports27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Yes-associated protein (YAP) is known to promote the stemness of multiple stem cell types, including pluripotent stem cells, while also antagonizing pluripotency during early embryogenesis. How YAP accomplishes these distinct functions remains unclear. Here, we report that, depending on the specific cells in which it is expressed, YAP could exhibit opposing effects on pluripotency induction from mouse somatic cells. Specifically, YAP inhibits pluripotency induction cell-autonomously but promotes it non-cell-autonomously. For its non-cell-autonomous role, YAP alters the expression of many secreted and matricellular proteins, including CYR61. YAP's non-cell-autonomous promoting effect could be recapitulated by recombinant CYR61 and abrogated by CYR61 depletion. Thus, we define a YAP-driven effect on enhancing pluripotency induction largely mediated by CYR61. Our work highlights the importance of considering the distinct contributions from heterologous cell types in deciphering cell fate control mechanisms and calls for careful re-examination of the co-existing bystander cells in complex cultures and tissues.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCYR61Cell biologyMatricellular proteinSomatic cellInduced pluripotent stem cellCell fate determinationCellStem cellCellular differentiationCell typeEmbryonic stem cellCTGFGeneticsGrowth factorTranscription factorExtracellular matrixGeneReceptorHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZPluripotent Stem Cells Research
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