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Over-expressed, N-terminally truncated BRAF is detected in the nucleus of cells with nuclear phosphorylated MEK and ERK.

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posted on 2019-09-10, 13:04 authored by F Hey, C Andreadi, C Noble, B Patel, H Jin, T Kamata, K Straatman, J Luo, K Balmanno, DTW Jones, VP Collins, SJ Cook, CJ Caunt, C Pritchard
BRAF is a cytoplasmic protein kinase, which activates the MEK-ERK signalling pathway. Deregulation of the pathway is associated with the presence of BRAF mutations in human cancer, the most common being V600E BRAF, although structural rearrangements, which remove N-terminal regulatory sequences, have also been reported. RAF-MEK-ERK signalling is normally thought to occur in the cytoplasm of the cell. However, in an investigation of BRAF localisation using fluorescence microscopy combined with subcellular fractionation of Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)-tagged proteins expressed in NIH3T3 cells, surprisingly, we detected N-terminally truncated BRAF (ΔBRAF) in both nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. In contrast, ΔCRAF and full-length, wild-type BRAF (WTBRAF) were detected at lower levels in the nucleus while full-length V600EBRAF was virtually excluded from this compartment. Similar results were obtained using ΔBRAF tagged with the hormone-binding domain of the oestrogen receptor (hbER) and with the KIAA1549-ΔBRAF translocation mutant found in human pilocytic astrocytomas. Here we show that GFP-ΔBRAF nuclear translocation does not involve a canonical Nuclear Localisation Signal (NLS), but is suppressed by N-terminal sequences. Nuclear GFP-ΔBRAF retains MEK/ERK activating potential and is associated with the accumulation of phosphorylated MEK and ERK in the nucleus. In contrast, full-length GFP-WTBRAF and GFP-V600EBRAF are associated with the accumulation of phosphorylated ERK but not phosphorylated MEK in the nucleus. These data have implications for cancers bearing single nucleotide variants or N-terminal deleted structural variants of BRAF.

Funding

This study was supported by Worldwide Cancer Research (Grant number: 09-0412) and Cancer Research UK (Grant number: C1362/A6969).

History

Citation

Heliyon, 2018, 4 (12), e01065

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/Biological Sciences/Old Departments Pre 01 Aug 2015/Department of Biochemistry (Pre 01 Aug 2015)

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Heliyon

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

2405-8440

Acceptance date

2018-12-14

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2019-09-10

Publisher version

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844018320747?via=ihub

Notes

Supplementary content related to this article has been published online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e01065.

Language

en

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