Friday, January 22, 2021

Study of the fly embryo as a route to understanding cellular mechanisms of cancer

Mol Biol Cell. 2021 Jan 21:mbcE20100625. doi: 10.1091/mbc.E20-10-0625.
Molecular mechanisms underlying cellular effects of human MEK1 mutations.

Marmion RA(1), Yang L(1), Goyal Y(1)(2)(3), Jindal GA(1)(2)(4), Wetzel JL(1)(5),
Singh M(1)(5), Schüpbach T(6), Shvartsman SY(1)(2)(6)(7).

Abstract:

Terminal regions of Drosophila embryos are patterned by signaling through ERK, which is genetically deregulated in multiple human diseases. Quantitative studies of terminal patterning have been recently used to investigate gain-of-function variants of human MEK1, encoding the MEK kinase that directly activates ERK by dual phosphorylation. Unexpectedly, several mutations reduced ERK activation by extracellular signals, possibly through a negative feedback triggered by signal-independent activity of the mutant variants. Here we present experimental evidence supporting this model. Using a MEK variant that combines a mutation within the negative regulatory region with alanine substitutions in the activation loop, we prove that pathogenic variants indeed acquire signal-independent kinase activity. We also demonstrate that signal-dependent activation of these variants is independent of KSR, a conserved adaptor that is indispensable for activation of normal MEK. Finally, we show that attenuation of ERK activation by extracellular signals stems from transcriptional induction of Mkp3, a dual specificity phosphatase that deactivates ERK by dephosphorylation. These findings in the Drosophila embryo highlight its power for investigating diverse effects of human disease mutations.

DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E20-10-0625
PMID: 33476180

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