RAF inhibitors transactivate RAF dimers and ERK signalling in cells with wild-type BRAF Journal Article


Authors: Poulikakos, P. I.; Zhang, C.; Bollag, G.; Shokat, K. M.; Rosen, N.
Article Title: RAF inhibitors transactivate RAF dimers and ERK signalling in cells with wild-type BRAF
Abstract: Tumours with mutant BRAF are dependent on the RAFĝ€" MEKĝ€"ERK signalling pathway for their growth. We found that ATP-competitive RAF inhibitors inhibit ERK signalling in cells with mutant BRAF, but unexpectedly enhance signalling in cells with wild-type BRAF. Here we demonstrate the mechanistic basis for these findings. We used chemical genetic methods to show that drug-mediated transactivation of RAF dimers is responsible for paradoxical activation of the enzyme by inhibitors. Induction of ERK signalling requires direct binding of the drug to the ATP-binding site of one kinase of the dimer and is dependent on RAS activity. Drug binding to one member of RAF homodimers (CRAFĝ€"CRAF) or heterodimers (CRAFĝ€"BRAF) inhibits one protomer, but results in transactivation of the drug-free protomer. In BRAF(V600E) tumours, RAS is not activated, thus transactivation is minimal and ERK signalling is inhibited in cells exposed to RAF inhibitors. These results indicate that RAF inhibitors will be effective in tumours in which BRAF is mutated. Furthermore, because RAF inhibitors do not inhibit ERK signalling in other cells, the model predicts that they would have a higher therapeutic index and greater antitumour activity than mitogen-activated protein kinase (MEK) inhibitors, but could also cause toxicity due to MEK/ERK activation. These predictions have been borne out in a recent clinical trial of the RAF inhibitor PLX4032 (refs 4, 5). The model indicates that promotion of RAF dimerization by elevation of wild-type RAF expression or RAS activity could lead to drug resistance in mutant BRAF tumours. In agreement with this prediction, RAF inhibitors do not inhibit ERK signalling in cells that coexpress BRAF(V600E) and mutant RAS. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Keywords: mitogen activated protein kinase; controlled study; protein expression; unclassified drug; human cell; mutation; sorafenib; neoplasms; animals; mice; drug inhibition; enzyme inhibition; gene expression; models, biological; map kinase signaling system; mitogen activated protein kinase inhibitor; cell line; protein binding; antineoplastic activity; enzyme activation; enzyme activity; cell line, tumor; phosphorylation; protein kinase inhibitors; enzyme phosphorylation; protein multimerization; sulfonamides; extracellular signal-regulated map kinases; binding site; ras proteins; adenosine triphosphate; tumor; toxicity; indoles; catalytic domain; transcriptional activation; b raf kinase; mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases; raf kinases; phosphotransferase inhibitor; drug binding; proto-oncogene proteins b-raf; plx 4032; drug; plx 4720; model test
Journal Title: Nature
Volume: 464
Issue: 7287
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2010-03-18
Start Page: 427
End Page: 430
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/nature08902
PUBMED: 20179705
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3178447
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 81" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: NATUA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Neal Rosen
    425 Rosen