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ID 116248
Author
Niitsu, Yoshiro Sapporo Medical University|Shonan Kamakura General Hospital
Takanashi, Kunihiro Sapporo Medical University|Otaru Ekisaikai Hospital
Hayashi, Tsuyoshi Sapporo Medical University|Teine Keijinkai Hospital
Kubo-Birukawa, Naoko Sapporo Medical University
Shimizu, Fumiko Sapporo Medical University
Fujitani, Naoki Sapporo Medical University
Shimoyama, Rai Shonan Kamakura General Hospital
Kukitsu, Takehiro Sapporo Medical University|Kukitsu Clinic
Kurata, Wataru Shonan Kamakura General Hospital
Tashiro, Yasuyuki Shonan Kamakura General Hospital
Listowsky, Irving Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Keywords
mKRAS and mBRAF cancers
autocrine growth cycle
CRAF/GSTP1 complex
refractory cancers
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
The Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK pathway is an essential signaling cascade for various refractory cancers, such as those with mutant KRAS (mKRAS) and BRAF (mBRAF). However, there are unsolved ambiguities underlying mechanisms for this growth signaling thereby creating therapeutic complications. This study shows that a vital component of the pathway CRAF is directly impacted by an end product of the cascade, glutathione transferases (GST) P1 (GSTP1), driving a previously unrecognized autocrine cycle that sustains proliferation of mKRAS and mBRAF cancer cells, independent of oncogenic stimuli. The CRAF interaction with GSTP1 occurs at its N-terminal regulatory domain, CR1 motif, resulting in its stabilization, enhanced dimerization, and augmented catalytic activity. Consistent with the autocrine cycle scheme, silencing GSTP1 brought about significant suppression of proliferation of mKRAS and mBRAF cells in vitro and suppressed tumorigenesis of the xenografted mKRAS tumor in vivo. GSTP1 knockout mice showed significantly impaired carcinogenesis of mKRAS colon cancer. Consequently, hindering the autocrine loop by targeting CRAF/GSTP1 interactions should provide innovative therapeutic modalities for these cancers.
Journal Title
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
ISSN
10916490
NCID
AA11726874
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Volume
117
Issue
32
Start Page
19435
End Page
19445
Published Date
2020-07-27
Rights
This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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DOI (Published Version)
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language
eng
TextVersion
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departments
Medical Sciences