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Pumping the brakes on RAS – negative regulators and death effectors of RAS

Desmond R. Harrell Stewart, Geoffrey Clark

2020Journal of Cell Science32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mutations that activate the RAS oncoproteins are common in cancer. However, aberrant upregulation of RAS activity often occurs in the absence of activating mutations in the RAS genes due to defects in RAS regulators. It is now clear that loss of function of Ras GTPase-activating proteins (RasGAPs) is common in tumors, and germline mutations in certain RasGAP genes are responsible for some clinical syndromes. Although regulation of RAS is central to their activity, RasGAPs exhibit great diversity in their binding partners and therefore affect signaling by multiple mechanisms that are independent of RAS. The RASSF family of tumor suppressors are essential to RAS-induced apoptosis and senescence, and constitute a barrier to RAS-mediated transformation. Suppression of RASSF protein expression can also promote the development of excessive RAS signaling by uncoupling RAS from growth inhibitory pathways. Here, we will examine how these effectors of RAS contribute to tumor suppression, through both RAS-dependent and RAS-independent mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAnti-apoptotic Ras signalling cascadeEffectorDownregulation and upregulationGTPase-activating proteinCell biologyGTPaseSignal transductionMutationSuppressorCancer researchGeneCarcinogenesisGeneticsG proteinMAPK/ERK pathwayHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingMelanoma and MAPK Pathways
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