Litcius/Paper detail

Scaffold association factor B (SAFB) is required for expression of prenyltransferases and RAS membrane association

Mo Zhou, Leena Kuruvilla, Xiarong Shi, Stephen Viviano, Ian M. Ahearn, Caroline R. Amendola, Wenjuan Su, Sana Badri, James P. Mahaffey, Nicole Fehrenbacher, Jane A. Skok, Joseph Schlessinger, Benjamin E. Turk, David Calderwood, Mark R. Philips

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inhibiting membrane association of RAS has long been considered a rational approach to anticancer therapy, which led to the development of farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs). However, FTIs proved ineffective against KRAS -driven tumors. To reveal alternative therapeutic strategies, we carried out a genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screen designed to identify genes required for KRAS4B membrane association. We identified five enzymes in the prenylation pathway and SAFB, a nuclear protein with both DNA and RNA binding domains. Silencing SAFB led to marked mislocalization of all RAS isoforms as well as RAP1A but not RAB7A, a pattern that phenocopied silencing FNTA , the prenyltransferase α subunit shared by farnesyltransferase and geranylgeranyltransferase type I. We found that SAFB promoted RAS membrane association by controlling FNTA expression. SAFB knockdown decreased GTP loading of RAS, abrogated alternative prenylation, and sensitized RAS -mutant cells to growth inhibition by FTI. Our work establishes the prenylation pathway as paramount in KRAS membrane association, reveals a regulator of prenyltransferase expression, and suggests that reduction in FNTA expression may enhance the efficacy of FTIs.

Topics & Concepts

Association (psychology)Expression (computer science)BiologyChemistryComputational biologyComputer sciencePsychologyProgramming languagePsychotherapistViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in InsectsUbiquitin and proteasome pathwaysPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors
Scaffold association factor B (SAFB) is required for expression of prenyltransferases and RAS membrane association | Litcius