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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mutations in
BRAF
, a component of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK) cascade, are frequent in
melanoma
. It is important to understand how
BRAF
mutations contribute to malignant traits including anchorage- and growth factor-independence. We have previously shown that efficient activation of ERK in normal human epidermal melanocytes (NHEM) requires both adhesion to the extracellular matrix and growth factors. Mutant V599E
BRAF
is sufficient to promote ERK activation independent of adhesion and growth factors. Here, we analysed regulation of G1 cell cycle events in NHEM and human
melanoma
cells. We show that S phase entry in NHEM requires both adhesion and growth factor signaling through the MEK-ERK pathway. This control correlates with induction of cyclin D1 and downregulation of p27Kip1, two key G1 cell cycle events. In
melanoma
cells expressing V599E
BRAF
, cyclin D1 was constitutively expressed independent of adhesion but dependent upon MEK activation and nuclear accumulation of ERK. Reduction of cyclin D1 levels by RNA interference inhibited S phase entry in
melanoma
cells. Importantly, expression of V599E
BRAF
in NHEM was sufficient to promote cyclin D1 promoter activity in the absence of adhesion. Additionally, p27Kip1 levels were downregulated in V599E
BRAF
-expressing
melanoma
cells and active
BRAF
was sufficient to downregulate p27Kip1 in serum-starved NHEM. Thus, adhesion-growth factor cooperation, leading to efficient activation of ERK, regulates cyclin D1 and p27Kip1 levels in human melanocytes and mutant
BRAF
overrides adhesion-growth factor control of these two G1 cell cycle proteins in melanomas. These findings provide important insight into how
BRAF
mutations contribute to aberrant human melanocyte proliferation.
...
PMID:Adhesion control of cyclin D1 and p27Kip1 levels is deregulated in melanoma cells through BRAF-MEK-ERK signaling. 1573 67
Activating mutations of the B-RAF gene are observed in >60% of human melanomas. Approximately 90% of these mutations occur in the activation segment of the kinase domain as a single-base substitution that converts a valine to glutamic acid at codon 599 (V599E) in exon 15. This mutation causes activation of the kinase as well as downstream effectors of the mitogen-activated protein kinase-signaling cascade, leading to
melanoma
tumor development by an as yet unknown mechanism. In this study, we have identified the role of (V599E)
B-Raf
in
melanoma
tumor development by characterizing the mechanism by which this mutant protein promotes
melanoma
tumorigenesis. Small interfering RNA targeted against
B-Raf
or a Raf kinase inhibitor (BAY 43-9006) was used to reduce expression and/or activity of (V599E)
B-Raf
in
melanoma
tumors. This inhibition led to reduced activity of the mitogen-activated protein kinase-signaling cascade and inhibited tumor development in animals. Targeted reduction of mutant (V599E)
B-Raf
expression (activity) in
melanoma
cells before tumor formation inhibited tumorigenesis by reducing the growth potential of
melanoma
cells. In contrast, reduction of mutant (V599E)
B-Raf
activity in preexisting tumors prevented further vascular development mediated through decreased vascular endothelial growth factor secretion, subsequently increasing apoptosis in tumors. These effects in combination with reduced proliferative capacity halted growth, but did not shrink the size of preexisting
melanoma
tumors. Thus, these studies identify the mechanistic underpinnings by which mutant (V599E)B-RAF promotes
melanoma
development and show the effectiveness of targeting this protein to inhibit
melanoma
tumor growth.
...
PMID:Mutant V599EB-Raf regulates growth and vascular development of malignant melanoma tumors. 1578 57
The Raf-MEK-ERK protein kinase cascade is a highly conserved signaling pathway that is pivotal in relaying environmental cues from the cell surface to the nucleus. Three Raf isoforms, which share great sequence and structure similarities, have been identified in mammalian cells. We have previously identified Raf kinase inhibitor protein (RKIP) as a negative regulator of the Raf-MEK-ERK signaling pathway by specifically binding to the Raf-1 isoform. We show here that RKIP also antagonizes kinase activity of the
B-Raf
isoform. Yeast two-hybrid and coimmunoprecipitation experiments indicated that RKIP specifically interacted with
B-Raf
. Ectopic expression of RKIP antagonized the kinase activity of
B-Raf
. We showed that the effects of RKIP on
B-Raf
functions were independent of its known inhibitory action on Raf-1. The expression levels of RKIP in
melanoma
cancer cell lines are low relative to primary melanocytes. Forced expression of RKIP partially reverted the oncogenic
B-Raf
kinase-transformed
melanoma
cancer cell line SK-Mel-28. The low expression of RKIP and its antagonistic action on
B-Raf
suggests that RKIP may play an important role in
melanoma
turmorgenesis.
...
PMID:RKIP downregulates B-Raf kinase activity in melanoma cancer cells. 1578 37
Somatic mutations of
BRAF
have been identified in both
melanoma
tumors and benign nevi. Germ line mutations in
BRAF
have not been identified as causal in families predisposed to
melanoma
. However, a recent study suggested that a
BRAF
haplotype was associated with risk of sporadic
melanoma
in men. Polymorphisms or other variants in the
BRAF
gene may therefore act as candidate low-penetrance genes for nevus/
melanoma
susceptibility. We hypothesized that promoter variants would be the most likely candidates for determinants of risk. Using denaturing high-pressure liquid chromatography and sequencing, we screened peripheral blood DNA from 184 familial
melanoma
cases for
BRAF
promoter variants. We identified a promoter insertion/deletion in linkage disequilibrium with the previously described
BRAF
polymorphism in intron 11 (rs1639679) reported to be associated with
melanoma
susceptibility in males. We therefore investigated the contribution of this
BRAF
polymorphism to
melanoma
susceptibility in 581 consecutively recruited incident cases, 258 incident cases in a study of late relapse, 673 female general practitioner controls, and the 184 familial cases. We found no statistically significant difference in either genotype or allele frequencies between cases and controls overall or between male and female cases for the
BRAF
polymorphism in the two incident case series. Our results therefore suggest that the
BRAF
polymorphism is not significantly associated with
melanoma
and the promoter insertion/deletion linked with the polymorphism is not a causal variant. In addition, we found that there was no association between the
BRAF
genotype and mean total number of banal or atypical nevi in either the cases or controls.
...
PMID:No Evidence for BRAF as a melanoma/nevus susceptibility gene. 1582 63
An activating mutation in codon 599 of
BRAF
has been identified in approximately 60% of human cutaneous nevi and melanomas, but not melanomas of mucosal origin. The purpose of this study was to determine if
BRAF
mutations occur in canine oral malignant melanomas. The canine
BRAF
gene was first cloned from normal canine testicular cDNA, and a novel previously unreported splice variant involving exon 5 was identified during this process. To screen canine
melanoma
samples for
BRAF
mutation in codon 599, cDNA and genomic DNA were isolated from canine
malignant melanoma
cell lines and primary tumor samples respectively, all from cases seen at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at the University of California, Davis. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed for exon 15 using primers based at the 5' end of exon 15 and the 5' end of intron 15 and the resultant products were directly sequenced. No mutations in codon 599 or exon 15 were identified in any of the 17 samples evaluated. However, all of the
melanoma
cell lines expressed
BRAF
and demonstrated high levels of basal ERK phosphorylation suggesting that dysregulation of this pathway is present. Therefore, similar to the case with human mucosal melanomas, canine oral malignant melanomas do not possess codon 599
BRAF
mutations commonly identified in human cutaneous melanomas. This finding supports the notion that melanomas arising from non-sun-exposed sites exhibit distinct mechanisms of molecular transformation.
...
PMID:Exon 15 BRAF mutations are uncommon in canine oral malignant melanomas. 1583 38
Except for high-dose interferon as adjuvant therapy in stage III disease, little success has emerged over the last 20 years for metastatic melanoma. Recent advances in
melanoma
biology suggest that disarming oncogenic mechanisms in
melanoma
may be an attractive approach to therapy. For instance, sustained expression of Bcl2 has been associated with an increased resistance to apoptosis, and recently, anti-sense-mediated reduction of Bcl2 levels was shown to chemosensitize patients to dacarbazine, dimethyl triazino imidazole carboxomide, or DTIC. Likewise, the identification of activating mutations in the RAS signaling pathway, including the NRAS and
BRAF
genes, opens up new therapeutic options for RAS and RAF inhibitors. A more thorough understanding of
melanoma
biology and tumor immunology will undoubtedly yield new promise for patients with advanced disease.
...
PMID:Melanoma treatment update. 1583 58
The heat shock protein Hsp90 is a potential target for drug discovery of novel anticancer agents. By affecting this protein, several cell signaling pathways may be simultaneously modulated. The geldanamycin analog 17AAG has been shown to inhibit Hsp90 and associated proteins. Its clinical use, however, is hampered by poor solubility and thus, difficulties in formulation. Therefore, a water-soluble derivative was desirable and 17-dimethylaminoethylamino-17-demethoxy-geldanamycin (17DMAG) is such a derivative. Studies were carried out in order to evaluate the activity and molecular mechanism(s) of 17DMAG in comparison with those of 17-allylamino-demethoxygeldanamycin (17AAG). 17DMAG was found to be more potent than 17AAG in a panel of 64 different patient-derived tumor explants studied in vitro in the clonogenic assay. The tumor types that responded best included mammary cancers (six of eight), head and neck cancers (two of two), sarcomas (four of four), pancreas carcinoma (two of three), colon tumors (four of eight for 17AAG and six of eight for 17DMAG), and
melanoma
(two of seven). Bioinformatic comparisons suggested that, while 17AAG and 17DMAG are likely to share the same mode(s) of action, there was very little similarity with standard anticancer agents. Using three permanent human
melanoma
cell lines with differing sensitivities to 17AAG and 17DMAG (MEXF 276L, MEXF 462NL and MEXF 514L), we found that Hsp90 protein was reduced following treatment at a concentration associated with total growth inhibition. The latter occurred in MEXF 276L cells only, which are most sensitive to both compounds. The depletion of Hsp90 was more pronounced in cells exposed to 17DMAG than in those treated with 17AAG. The reduction in Hsp90 was associated with the expression of erbB2 and erbB3 in MEXF 276L, while erbB2 and erbB3 were absent in the more resistant MEXF 462NL and MEXF 514L cells. Levels of known Hsp90 client proteins such as phosphorylated AKT followed by AKT, cyclin D1 preceding cdk4, and craf-1 declined as a result of drug treatment in all three
melanoma
cell lines. However, the duration of drug exposure needed to achieve these effects was variable. All cell lines showed increased expression of Hsp70 and activated cleavage of PARP. No change in PI3K expression was observed and all
melanoma
cells were found to harbor the activating V599E
BRAF
kinase mutation. The results of our in vitro studies are consistent with both 17AAG and 17DMAG acting via the same molecular mechanism, i.e. by modulating Hsp90 function. Since 17DMAG can be formulated in physiological aqueous solutions, the data reported here strongly support the development of 17DMAG as a more pharmaceutically practicable congener of 17AAG.
...
PMID:Comparison of 17-dimethylaminoethylamino-17-demethoxy-geldanamycin (17DMAG) and 17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17AAG) in vitro: effects on Hsp90 and client proteins in melanoma models. 1584 78
The most common genetic determinants of skin cancer are the genes that control skin color so that the genes expressed as black skin are protective. Within the white population variants at the MC1R locus are shown to increase susceptibility, and recent evidence suggests that polymorphisms in the OCA2 gene interact to modify risk. Other as-yet-unidentified pigment genes may also play a role in susceptibility to
melanoma
. Thus MC1R variants are the most common low-penetrance
melanoma
-susceptibility genes so far identified. Other putative low-penetrance susceptibility genes have been explored using candidate gene approaches. Good candidates such as the DNA repair gene XRCC3 and polymorphisms of EGF have been studied but excluded. Other candidates such as
BRAF
polymorphisms and variants at the CDKN2A locus remain to be fully investigated. More progress has been made in identifying high-penetrance genes, however. The most common (and probably the most penetrant) susceptibility locus is the CDKN2A locus coding for two tumor suppressor proteins, p16 and p14ARF. Mutations at this locus that impact p16, p14ARF or both proteins all increase susceptibility to
melanoma
. Families inheriting such mutants are at increased risk of cutaneous melanoma, and the penetrance is increased by residence in sunny climates and co-inheritance of MC1R variants. Some families also appear to be at increased risk of pancreatic cancer, but the determinants of susceptibility to pancreatic cancer are not yet understood. Very rare families have germline mutations in the CDK4 gene which impact on the p16 binding site. There are other high-penetrance susceptibility genes, however, which remain undiscovered. There is evidence of one at 1p22. The
Melanoma
Genetics Consortium (www.genomel.org) continues to explore this and the genetic epidemiology of the CDKN2A locus.
...
PMID:The genetics of susceptibility to cutaneous melanoma. 1588 16
Activating mutations in the
BRAF
kinase have been reported in a large number of cases of
malignant melanoma
. This suggests that therapy with specific RAF kinase inhibitors may find use in treating this disease. If the response to RAF kinase inhibition is dependent on the presence of an activated
BRAF
protein, it will be necessary to evaluate cases of
malignant melanoma
for the presence or absence of
BRAF
mutations. High-resolution amplicon melting analysis is able to detect single base-pair changes in DNA isolated from paraffin-embedded tissue sections and obviates the need for direct DNA sequencing. Results can be available within 48 hours. In this report, we used high-resolution amplicon melting analysis to evaluate 90 cases of
malignant melanoma
for
BRAF
mutations. Of these 90 cases, 74 were metastatic melanomas, 12 were primary cutaneous melanomas, and 4 were in situ melanomas.
BRAF
activation mutations were found in 43 cases (48%). Forty-one of these mutations were in exon 15. The mutations in exon 15 included V600E (34 cases), V600K (6 cases), and V600R (1 case). Two activating mutations were found in exon 11, G469V and G469R. The presence or absence of a
BRAF
mutation in the junctional component of an invasive
melanoma
was maintained in the invasive component. We also evaluated these 90 cases, as well as an additional 10 cases (total of 100) for the expression of c-kit. The majority of invasive and metastatic malignant melanomas did not express c-kit, although all in situ lesions and the junctional components of invasive lesions were strongly c-kit positive. Surprisingly, 2 cases of metastatic
malignant melanoma
(2%) showed strong and diffuse c-kit expression and contained a c-kit-activating mutation, L576P, as detected by high-resolution amplicon melting analysis and confirmed by direct DNA sequencing. These 2 c-kit mutation-positive cases did not contain
BRAF
mutations. The presence of a c-kit-activating mutation in metastatic
malignant melanoma
suggests that a small number of melanomas may progress by a somatic mutation of the c-kit gene. The presence of
BRAF
- and c-kit-activating mutations in
malignant melanoma
suggests new approaches to treating this disease involving specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors may prove worthwhile and that mutation analysis by high-resolution melting analysis might help guide therapy.
...
PMID:Human malignant melanoma: detection of BRAF- and c-kit-activating mutations by high-resolution amplicon melting analysis. 1594 15
BRAF
mutations are found in many human tumors, namely melanomas ( approximately 70%) and colon carcinomas ( approximately 15%). This paper presents a method for identification of exon 15
BRAF
mutations by denaturant capillary electrophoresis (CE), an analysis method that is sensitive, cost-effective (involving only polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and electrophoresis) and capable of high-throughput screening. In total, we found 21 (70%) out of 30
melanoma
cell lines with
BRAF
mutations in exon 15: two of which were the p.Val600Asp (c.1799-800TG>AT) mutation, one cell line contained the p.Val600Arg (c.1798-99GT>AG) mutation, and 18 cell lines contained the p.Val600Glu (c.1799T>A) mutation. Of the nine cell lines that did not contain a
BRAF
mutation, five contained an NRAS mutation at exon 2, and no mutations were detected in NRAS exon 1. There was no overlap of NRAS and
BRAF
mutations in the same cell line. In addition, we looked at 221 colon biopsy samples and identified one further
BRAF
mutation, the p.Asp594Gly (c.1781A>G) mutation, in seven samples. The p.Val600Glu mutation was identified in 11 of the colon biopsy samples. Using the four mutations of
BRAF
exon 15, we then constructed a denaturing CE standard capable of distinguishing between each of the mutations; therefore, sequencing does not need to be performed to confirm the mutation. In conclusion, this sensitive, cost-effective mutation assay for
BRAF
(and RAS) will provide the opportunity to detect and determine mutations without the need to purify samples for sequencing. Future large-scale studies will provide the clinical usefulness of such mutations.
...
PMID:BRAF mutation detection and identification by cycling temperature capillary electrophoresis. 1594 20
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