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The RAS GTPase RIT1 compromises mitotic fidelity through spindle assembly checkpoint suppression

Cuevas-Navarro, Antonio; Van, Richard; Cheng, Alice; Urisman, Anatoly; Castel, Pau; McCormick, Frank
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) functions as a sensor of unattached kinetochores that delays mitotic progression into anaphase until proper chromosome segregation is guaranteed.1
PMID: 34237269
ISSN: 1879-0445
CID: 4933412

RAS interaction with Sin1 is dispensable for mTORC2 assembly and activity

Castel, Pau; Dharmaiah, Srisathiyanarayanan; Sale, Matthew J; Messing, Simon; Rizzuto, Gabrielle; Cuevas-Navarro, Antonio; Cheng, Alice; Trnka, Michael J; Urisman, Anatoly; Esposito, Dominic; Simanshu, Dhirendra K; McCormick, Frank
RAS proteins are molecular switches that interact with effector proteins when bound to guanosine triphosphate, stimulating downstream signaling in response to multiple stimuli. Although several canonical downstream effectors have been extensively studied and tested as potential targets for RAS-driven cancers, many of these remain poorly characterized. In this study, we undertook a biochemical and structural approach to further study the role of Sin1 as a RAS effector. Sin1 interacted predominantly with KRAS isoform 4A in cells through an atypical RAS-binding domain that we have characterized by X-ray crystallography. Despite the essential role of Sin1 in the assembly and activity of mTORC2, we find that the interaction with RAS is not required for these functions. Cells and mice expressing a mutant of Sin1 that is unable to bind RAS are proficient for activation and assembly of mTORC2. Our results suggest that Sin1 is a bona fide RAS effector that regulates downstream signaling in an mTORC2-independent manner.
PMCID:8379911
PMID: 34380736
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5004392

Josep Baselga (1959-2021)

Castel, Pau; Toska, Eneda
PMID: 34171315
ISSN: 1097-4172
CID: 4925822

José Baselga (1959-2021)

Castel, Pau; Toska, Eneda; Vasan, Neil; Cocco, Emiliano; Scaltriti, Maurizio
PMID: 33930314
ISSN: 1878-3686
CID: 4853782

Genomic alterations in PIK3CA-mutated breast cancer result in mTORC1 activation and limit sensitivity to PI3Kα inhibitors

Cai, Yanyan; Xu, Guotai; Wu, Fan; Michelini, Flavia; Chan, Carmen; Qu, Xuan; Selenica, Pier; Ladewig, Erik; Castel, Pau; Cheng, Yuanming; Zhao, Alison; Jhaveri, Komal; Toska, Eneda; Jimenez, Marta; Jacquet Jacquet, Alexandra; Tran-Dien, Alicia; Andre, Fabrice; Chandarlapaty, Sarat; Reis-Filho, Jorge S; Razavi, Pedram; Scaltriti, Maurizio
PI3Kα inhibitors have shown clinical activity in PIK3CA-mutated estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer patients. Using whole genome CRISPR/Cas9 sgRNA knockout screens, we identified and validated several negative regulators of mTORC1 whose loss confers resistance to PI3Kα inhibition. Among the top candidates were TSC1, TSC2, TBC1D7, AKT1S1, STK11, MARK2, PDE7A, DEPDC5, NPRL2, NPRL3, C12orf66, SZT2 and ITFG2. Loss of these genes invariably results in sustained mTOR signaling under pharmacological inhibition of the PI3K-AKT pathway. Moreover, resistance could be prevented or overcome by mTOR inhibition, confirming the causative role of sustained mTOR activity in limiting the sensitivity to PI3Kα inhibition. Cumulatively, genomic alterations affecting these genes are identified in about 15% of PIK3CA-mutated breast tumors and appear to be mutually exclusive. This study improves our understanding of the role of mTOR signaling restoration in leading to resistance to PI3Kα inhibition and proposes therapeutic strategies to prevent or revert this resistance.
PMID: 33685991
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 4809182

Minor intron retention drives clonal hematopoietic disorders and diverse cancer predisposition

Inoue, Daichi; Polaski, Jacob T; Taylor, Justin; Castel, Pau; Chen, Sisi; Kobayashi, Susumu; Hogg, Simon J; Hayashi, Yasutaka; Pineda, Jose Mario Bello; El Marabti, Ettaib; Erickson, Caroline; Knorr, Katherine; Fukumoto, Miki; Yamazaki, Hiromi; Tanaka, Atsushi; Fukui, Chie; Lu, Sydney X; Durham, Benjamin H; Liu, Bo; Wang, Eric; Mehta, Sanjoy; Zakheim, Daniel; Garippa, Ralph; Penson, Alex; Chew, Guo-Liang; McCormick, Frank; Bradley, Robert K; Abdel-Wahab, Omar
Most eukaryotes harbor two distinct pre-mRNA splicing machineries: the major spliceosome, which removes >99% of introns, and the minor spliceosome, which removes rare, evolutionarily conserved introns. Although hypothesized to serve important regulatory functions, physiologic roles of the minor spliceosome are not well understood. For example, the minor spliceosome component ZRSR2 is subject to recurrent, leukemia-associated mutations, yet functional connections among minor introns, hematopoiesis and cancers are unclear. Here, we identify that impaired minor intron excision via ZRSR2 loss enhances hematopoietic stem cell self-renewal. CRISPR screens mimicking nonsense-mediated decay of minor intron-containing mRNA species converged on LZTR1, a regulator of RAS-related GTPases. LZTR1 minor intron retention was also discovered in the RASopathy Noonan syndrome, due to intronic mutations disrupting splicing and diverse solid tumors. These data uncover minor intron recognition as a regulator of hematopoiesis, noncoding mutations within minor introns as potential cancer drivers and links among ZRSR2 mutations, LZTR1 regulation and leukemias.
PMID: 33846634
ISSN: 1546-1718
CID: 4841032

Correction: DoMY-Seq: A yeast two-hybrid-based technique for precision mapping of protein-protein interaction motifs

Castel, Pau; Holtz-Morris, Ann; Kwon, Yongwon; Suter, Bernhard P; McCormick, Frank
PMID: 33837738
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 4845432

DoMY-Seq: A yeast two-hybrid-based technique for precision mapping of protein-protein interaction motifs

Castel, Pau; Holtz-Morris, Ann; Kwon, Yongwon; Suter, Bernhard P; McCormick, Frank
Interactions between proteins are fundamental for every biological process and especially important in cell signaling pathways. Biochemical techniques that evaluate these protein-protein interactions (PPIs), such as in vitro pull downs and coimmunoprecipitations, have become popular in most laboratories and are essential to identify and validate novel protein binding partners. Most PPIs occur through small domains or motifs, which are challenging and laborious to map by using standard biochemical approaches because they generally require the cloning of several truncation mutants. Moreover, these classical methodologies provide limited resolution of the interacting interface. Here, we describe the development of an alternative technique to overcome these limitations termed "Protein Domain mapping using Yeast 2 Hybrid-Next Generation Sequencing" (DoMY-Seq), which leverages both yeast two-hybrid and next-generation sequencing techniques. In brief, our approach involves creating a library of fragments derived from an open reading frame of interest and enriching for the interacting fragments using a yeast two-hybrid reporter system. Next-generation sequencing is then subsequently employed to read and map the sequence of the interacting fragment, yielding a high-resolution plot of the binding interface. We optimized DoMY-Seq by taking advantage of the well-described and high-affinity interaction between KRAS and CRAF, and we provide high-resolution domain mapping on this and other protein-interacting pairs, including CRAF-MEK1, RIT1-RGL3, and p53-MDM2. Thus, DoMY-Seq provides an unbiased alternative method to rapidly identify the domains involved in PPIs by advancing the use of yeast two-hybrid technology.
PMID: 33410398
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 4739142

KrasP34R and KrasT58I mutations induce distinct RASopathy phenotypes in mice

Wong, Jasmine C; Perez-Mancera, Pedro A; Huang, Tannie Q; Kim, Jangkyung; Grego-Bessa, Joaquim; Alzamora, Maria Del Pilar; Kogan, Scott C; Sharir, Amnon; Keefe, Susan H; Morales, Carolina E; Schanze, Denny; Castel, Pau; Hirose, Kentaro; Huang, Guo N; Zenker, Martin; Sheppard, Dean; Klein, Ophir; Tuveson, David; Braun, Benjamin S; Shannon, Kevin
Somatic KRAS mutations are highly prevalent in many human cancers. In addition, a distinct spectrum of germline KRAS mutations cause developmental disorders called RASopathies. The mutant proteins encoded by these germline KRAS mutations are less biochemically and functionally activated than the mutant proteins found in cancer. We generated mice harboring conditional KrasLSL-P34R and KrasLSL-T58I "knock in" alleles and characterized the consequences of each mutation in vivo. Embryonic expression of KrasT58I resulted in craniofacial abnormalities reminiscent of RASopathy disorders, and these mice also exhibited hyperplastic growth of multiple organs, modest alterations in cardiac valvulogenesis, myocardial hypertrophy, and myeloproliferation. By contrast, embryonic KrasP34R expression resulted in early perinatal lethality from respiratory failure due to defective lung sacculation, which was associated with aberrant ERK activity in lung epithelial cells. Somatic Mx1-Cre-mediated activation in the hematopoietic compartment showed that KrasP34R and KrasT58I expression had distinct signaling effects despite causing a similar spectrum of hematologic diseases. These novel mouse strains are robust models for investigating the consequences of endogenous hyperactive K-Ras signaling in different developing and adult tissues, for comparing how oncogenic and germline K-Ras proteins perturb signaling networks and cell fate decisions, and for performing preclinical therapeutic trials.
PMID: 32990679
ISSN: 2379-3708
CID: 4616712

Clinical and genetic evaluation of six children with diffuse capillary malformation and undergrowth

Cubiró, Xavier; Rozas-Muñoz, Eduardo; Castel, Pau; Roé Crespo, Esther; Garcia-Melendo, Cristina; Puig, Lluis; Baselga, Eulalia
BACKGROUND:Diffuse capillary malformation with overgrowth (DCMO) has been well described. However, capillary malformation with undergrowth (CMU) has been less reported in the literature. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:We sought to describe the clinical features and determine associated somatic mutations in patients with CMU. METHODS:We searched our multidisciplinary vascular anomalies clinic database for patients with CMU. Girth and length limb measurements were performed. In case of discrepancies in length, long leg radiograph studies were obtained. Whole-exome sequencing of blood and involved tissue DNA was carried out. RESULTS:We included six patients with CM and soft-tissue and bone undergrowth. CMs were patchy, reticulated, segmental, poorly demarcated, pink-red stains affecting the lower limb (five patients) or the whole hemibody (one patient). In five patients, the stain was diffuse, affecting more than one anatomic region. Prominent superficial veins were observed in three patients. Five patients presented with lower limb girth discrepancy; in three of them, there was also lower limb length discrepancy. In the remaining patient, only lower limb length discrepancy was found. Whole-exome sequencing from DNA tissue/blood detected previously described pathogenic somatic mutations on DDR2 (c.314G > A; p.Arg105His), GRHL2 (c.791A > G; p.Glu264Gly), and PIK3CA (c.2740G > A; p.Gly914Arg) genes. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:We propose the term "diffuse capillary malformation with undergrowth" for extensive reticular CMs associated with proportionate undergrowth. All our patients had a favorable outcome, and no genotype-phenotype association was found.
PMID: 32608066
ISSN: 1525-1470
CID: 4604512