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Kinase-Dead BRAF and Oncogenic RAS Cooperate to Drive Tumor Progression through CRAF
Author(s) -
Sonja J. Heidorn,
Carla Milagre,
Steven R. Whittaker,
Arnaud Nourry,
Ion Niculescu-Duvas,
Nathalie Dhomen,
Jahan Hussain,
Jorge S. ReisFilho,
Caroline J. Springer,
Catrin Pritchard,
Richard Marais
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2009.12.040
Subject(s) - biology , cancer research , mapk/erk pathway , kinase , carcinogenesis , melanoma , signal transduction , anti apoptotic ras signalling cascade , cancer , genetics
We describe a mechanism of tumorigenesis mediated by kinase-dead BRAF in the presence of oncogenic RAS. We show that drugs that selectively inhibit BRAF drive RAS-dependent BRAF binding to CRAF, CRAF activation, and MEK-ERK signaling. This does not occur when oncogenic BRAF is inhibited, demonstrating that BRAF inhibition per se does not drive pathway activation; it only occurs when BRAF is inhibited in the presence of oncogenic RAS. Kinase-dead BRAF mimics the effects of the BRAF-selective drugs and kinase-dead Braf and oncogenic Ras cooperate to induce melanoma in mice. Our data reveal another paradigm of BRAF-mediated signaling that promotes tumor progression. They highlight the importance of understanding pathway signaling in clinical practice and of genotyping tumors prior to administering BRAF-selective drugs, to identify patients who are likely to respond and also to identify patients who may experience adverse effects.

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