| Literature DB >> 27760319 |
Lisa Brenan1, Aleksandr Andreev1, Ofir Cohen2, Sasha Pantel1, Atanas Kamburov3, Davide Cacchiarelli4, Nicole S Persky1, Cong Zhu1, Mukta Bagul1, Eva M Goetz2, Alex B Burgin1, Levi A Garraway2, Gad Getz3, Tarjei S Mikkelsen1, Federica Piccioni1, David E Root1, Cory M Johannessen5.
Abstract
Tumor-specific genomic information has the potential to guide therapeutic strategies and revolutionize patient treatment. Currently, this approach is limited by an abundance of disease-associated mutants whose biological functions and impacts on therapeutic response are uncharacterized. To begin to address this limitation, we functionally characterized nearly all (99.84%) missense mutants of MAPK1/ERK2, an essential effector of oncogenic RAS and RAF. Using this approach, we discovered rare gain- and loss-of-function ERK2 mutants found in human tumors, revealing that, in the context of this assay, mutational frequency alone cannot identify all functionally impactful mutants. Gain-of-function ERK2 mutants induced variable responses to RAF-, MEK-, and ERK-directed therapies, providing a reference for future treatment decisions. Tumor-associated mutations spatially clustered in two ERK2 effector-recruitment domains yet produced mutants with opposite phenotypes. This approach articulates an allele-characterization framework that can be scaled to meet the goals of genome-guided oncology.Entities:
Keywords: ERK; MAPK; cancer; functional biology; precision medicine; precision oncology; rare mutants
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27760319 PMCID: PMC5120861 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.09.061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423