Publication:
KSR induces RAS-independent MAPK pathway activation and modulates the efficacy of KRAS inhibitors.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers
Publication date
2022-03-21
Authors
Paniagua, Guillen
Jacob, Harrys K C
Brehey, Oksana
García-Alonso, Sara
Pons, Tirso
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Metrics
Google Scholar
Export
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
The kinase suppressor of rat sarcoma (RAS) proteins (KSR1 and KSR2) have long been considered as scaffolding proteins required for optimal mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway signalling. However, recent evidence suggests that they play a more complex role within this pathway. Here, we demonstrate that ectopic expression of KSR1 or KSR2 is sufficient to activate the MAPK pathway and to induce cell proliferation in the absence of RAS proteins. In contrast, the ectopic expression of KSR proteins is not sufficient to induce cell proliferation in the absence of either rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma (RAF) or MAPK-ERK kinase proteins, indicating that they act upstream of RAF. Indeed, KSR1 requires dimerization with at least one member of the RAF family to stimulate proliferation, an event that results in the translocation of the heterodimerized RAF protein to the cell membrane. Mutations in the conserved aspartic acid-phenylalanine-glycine motif of KSR1 that affect ATP binding impair the induction of cell proliferation. We also show that increased expression levels of KSR1 decrease the responsiveness to the KRASG12C inhibitor sotorasib in human cancer cell lines, thus suggesting that increased levels of expression of KSR may make tumour cells less dependent on KRAS oncogenic signalling.
Description
MeSH Terms
DeCS Terms
Bibliographic citation
Mol Oncol . 2022 Mar 21.
Document type