BRAF and RAS Mutations in Human Lung Cancer and Melanoma

MS Brose, P Volpe, M Feldman, M Kumar, I Rishi… - Cancer research, 2002 - AACR
MS Brose, P Volpe, M Feldman, M Kumar, I Rishi, R Gerrero, E Einhorn, M Herlyn, J Minna
Cancer research, 2002AACR
BRAF encodes a RAS-regulated kinase that mediates cell growth and malignant
transformation kinase pathway activation. Recently, we have identified activating BRAF
mutations in 66% of melanomas and a smaller percentage of many other human cancers. To
determine whether BRAF mutations account for the MAP kinase pathway activation common
in non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLCs) and to extend the initial findings in melanoma,
we screened DNA from 179 NSCLCs and 35 melanomas for BRAF mutations (exons 11 and …
Abstract
BRAF encodes a RAS-regulated kinase that mediates cell growth and malignant transformation kinase pathway activation. Recently, we have identified activating BRAF mutations in 66% of melanomas and a smaller percentage of many other human cancers. To determine whether BRAF mutations account for the MAP kinase pathway activation common in non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLCs) and to extend the initial findings in melanoma, we screened DNA from 179 NSCLCs and 35 melanomas for BRAF mutations (exons 11 and 15). We identified BRAF mutations in 5 NSCLCs (3%; one V599 and four non-V599) and 22 melanomas (63%; 21 V599 and 1 non-V599). Three BRAF mutations identified in this study are novel, altering residues important in AKT-mediated BRAF phosphorylation and suggesting that disruption of AKT-induced BRAF inhibition can play a role in malignant transformation. To our knowledge, this is the first report of mutations documenting this interaction in human cancers. Although >90% of BRAF mutations in melanoma involve codon 599 (57 of 60), 8 of 9 BRAF mutations reported to date in NSCLC are non-V599 (89%; P < 10−7), strongly suggesting that BRAF mutations in NSCLC are qualitatively different from those in melanoma; thus, there may be therapeutic differences between lung cancer and melanoma in response to RAF inhibitors. Although uncommon, BRAF mutations in human lung cancers may identify a subset of tumors sensitive to targeted therapy.
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