Back to Search Start Over

Identification and characterization of a BRAF fusion oncoprotein with retained autoinhibitory domains

Authors :
Martina Fröhlich
Gregor Warsow
Olaf Neumann
Benedikt Brors
Florian Weinberg
Stefan Fröhling
Viola Hollek
Dieter Henrik Heiland
Peter Horak
Hanno Glimm
Sandra Braun
Ricarda Griffin
Christoph Heining
Corinna Spohr
Wilko Weichert
Albrecht Stenzinger
Christof von Kalle
Tilman Brummer
Mary Iconomou
Barbara Hutter
Sebastian Uhrig
Michael Röring
David E. Reuss
Simon Kreutzfeldt
Source :
Oncogene. 39:814-832
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Fusion proteins involving the BRAF serine/threonine kinase occur in many cancers. The oncogenic potential of BRAF fusions has been attributed to the loss of critical N-terminal domains that mediate BRAF autoinhibition. We used whole-exome and RNA sequencing in a patient with glioblastoma multiforme to identify a rearrangement between TTYH3, encoding a membrane-resident, calcium-activated chloride channel, and BRAF intron 1, resulting in a TTYH3–BRAF fusion protein that retained all features essential for BRAF autoinhibition. Accordingly, the BRAF moiety of the fusion protein alone, which represents full-length BRAF without the amino acids encoded by exon 1 (BRAFΔE1), did not induce MEK/ERK phosphorylation or transformation. Likewise, neither the TTYH3 moiety of the fusion protein nor full-length TTYH3 provoked ERK pathway activity or transformation. In contrast, TTYH3–BRAF displayed increased MEK phosphorylation potential and transforming activity, which were caused by TTYH3-mediated tethering of near-full-length BRAF to the (endo)membrane system. Consistent with this mechanism, a synthetic approach, in which BRAFΔE1 was tethered to the membrane by fusing it to the cytoplasmic tail of CD8 also induced transformation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that TTYH3–BRAF signals largely independent of a functional RAS binding domain, but requires an intact BRAF dimer interface and activation loop phosphorylation sites. Cells expressing TTYH3–BRAF exhibited increased MEK/ERK signaling, which was blocked by clinically achievable concentrations of sorafenib, trametinib, and the paradox breaker PLX8394. These data provide the first example of a fully autoinhibited BRAF protein whose oncogenic potential is dictated by a distinct fusion partner and not by a structural change in BRAF itself.

Details

ISSN :
14765594 and 09509232
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oncogene
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cc0b67c280404689ddaa0b6fae1658c7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-019-1021-1