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Publication : RAF inhibitor-induced KSR1/B-RAF binding and its effects on ERK cascade signaling.

First Author  McKay MM Year  2011
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  21
Issue  7 Pages  563-8
PubMed ID  21458265 Mgi Jnum  J:171981
Mgi Id  MGI:5002736 Doi  10.1016/j.cub.2011.02.033
Citation  McKay MM, et al. (2011) RAF inhibitor-induced KSR1/B-RAF binding and its effects on ERK cascade signaling. Curr Biol 21(7):563-8
abstractText  RAF kinase inhibitors can induce ERK cascade signaling by promoting dimerization of RAF family members in the presence of oncogenic or normally activated RAS. This interaction is mediated by a dimer interface region in the RAF kinase domain that is conserved in members of the ERK cascade scaffold family, kinase suppressor of RAS (KSR). In this study, we find that most RAF inhibitors also induce the binding of KSR1 to wild-type and oncogenic B-RAF proteins, including V600E B-RAF, but promote little complex formation between KSR1 and C-RAF. The inhibitor-induced KSR1/B-RAF interaction requires direct binding of the drug to B-RAF and is dependent on conserved dimer interface residues in each protein, but, unexpectedly, is not dependent on binding of B-RAF to activated RAS. Inhibitor-induced KSR/B-RAF complex formation can occur in the cytosol and is observed in normal mouse fibroblasts, as well as a variety of human cancer cell lines. Strikingly, we find that KSR1 competes with C-RAF for inhibitor-induced binding to B-RAF and, as a result, alters the effect of the inhibitors on ERK cascade signaling.
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