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Functional and biological heterogeneity of KRAS <sup>Q61</sup> mutations

41

Citations

58

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Missense mutations at the three hotspots in the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) RAS-Gly<sup>12</sup>, Gly<sup>13</sup>, and Gln<sup>61</sup> (commonly known as G12, G13, and Q61, respectively)-occur differentially among the three RAS isoforms. Q61 mutations in <i>KRAS</i> are infrequent and differ markedly in occurrence. Q61H is the predominant mutant (at 57%), followed by Q61R/L/K (collectively 40%), and Q61P and Q61E are the rarest (2 and 1%, respectively). Probability analysis suggested that mutational susceptibility to different DNA base changes cannot account for this distribution. Therefore, we investigated whether these frequencies might be explained by differences in the biochemical, structural, and biological properties of KRAS<sup>Q61</sup> mutants. Expression of KRAS<sup>Q61</sup> mutants in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts and RIE-1 epithelial cells caused various alterations in morphology, growth transformation, effector signaling, and metabolism. The relatively rare KRAS<sup>Q61E</sup> mutant stimulated actin stress fiber formation, a phenotype distinct from that of KRAS<sup>Q61H/R/L/P</sup>, which disrupted actin cytoskeletal organization. The crystal structure of KRAS<sup>Q61E</sup> was unexpectedly similar to that of wild-type KRAS, a potential basis for its weak oncogenicity. KRAS<sup>Q61H/L/R</sup>-mutant pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell lines exhibited KRAS-dependent growth and, as observed with KRAS<sup>G12</sup>-mutant PDAC, were susceptible to concurrent inhibition of ERK-MAPK signaling and of autophagy. Our results uncover phenotypic heterogeneity among KRAS<sup>Q61</sup> mutants and support the potential utility of therapeutic strategies that target KRAS<sup>Q61</sup> mutant-specific signaling and cellular output.

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