|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Glioma formation in neurofibromatosis 1 reflects preferential activation of K-RAS in astrocytes.

First Author  Dasgupta B Year  2005
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  65
Issue  1 Pages  236-45
PubMed ID  15665300 Mgi Jnum  J:95509
Mgi Id  MGI:3526457 Doi  10.1158/0008-5472.236.65.1
Citation  Dasgupta B, et al. (2005) Glioma formation in neurofibromatosis 1 reflects preferential activation of K-RAS in astrocytes. Cancer Res 65(1):236-45
abstractText  Children with the tumor predisposition syndrome, neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1), develop optic pathway gliomas. The NF1 gene product, neurofibromin, functions as a negative regulator of RAS, such that NF1 inactivation results in RAS hyperactivation. Recent studies have highlighted the divergent biological and biochemical properties of the various RAS isoforms, which prompted us to examine the consequence of Nf1 inactivation in astrocytes on RAS isoform activation in vitro and in vivo. In this report, we show that only K-RAS is activated in Nf1-/- astrocytes and that activation of K-RAS, but not H-RAS, accounts for the proliferative advantage and abnormal actin cytoskeleton-mediated processes observed in Nf1-/- astrocytes in vitro. Moreover, dominant inhibitory K-RAS corrects these abnormalities in Nf1-/- astrocytes invitro. Lastly, we show that Nf1+/- mice with astrocyte-specific activated K-RAS expression in vivo develop optic pathway gliomas, similar to our previously reported Nf1+/- mice with astrocyte Nf1 inactivation. Collectively, our results show that K-RAS is the primary target for neurofibromin GTPase-activating protein activity in vitro and in vivo and that K-RAS activation in astrocytes recapitulates the biochemical, biological, and tumorigenic properties of neurofibromin loss.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

11 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression