Multiplexed screens identify RAS paralogues HRAS and NRAS as suppressors of KRAS-driven lung cancer growth

Oncogenic KRAS mutations occur in approximately 30% of lung adenocarcinoma. Despite several decades of effort, oncogenic KRAS-driven lung cancer remains difficult to treat, and our understanding of the regulators of RAS signalling is incomplete. Here to uncover the impact of diverse KRAS-interacting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature cell biology 2023-01, Vol.25 (1), p.159-169
Hauptverfasser: Tang, Rui, Shuldiner, Emily G., Kelly, Marcus, Murray, Christopher W., Hebert, Jess D., Andrejka, Laura, Tsai, Min K., Hughes, Nicholas W., Parker, Mitchell I., Cai, Hongchen, Li, Yao-Cheng, Wahl, Geoffrey M., Dunbrack, Roland L., Jackson, Peter K., Petrov, Dmitri A., Winslow, Monte M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Oncogenic KRAS mutations occur in approximately 30% of lung adenocarcinoma. Despite several decades of effort, oncogenic KRAS-driven lung cancer remains difficult to treat, and our understanding of the regulators of RAS signalling is incomplete. Here to uncover the impact of diverse KRAS-interacting proteins on lung cancer growth, we combined multiplexed somatic CRISPR/Cas9-based genome editing in genetically engineered mouse models with tumour barcoding and high-throughput barcode sequencing. Through a series of CRISPR/Cas9 screens in autochthonous lung cancer models, we show that HRAS and NRAS are suppressors of KRAS G12D -driven tumour growth in vivo and confirm these effects in oncogenic KRAS-driven human lung cancer cell lines. Mechanistically, RAS paralogues interact with oncogenic KRAS, suppress KRAS–KRAS interactions, and reduce downstream ERK signalling. Furthermore, HRAS and NRAS mutations identified in oncogenic KRAS-driven human tumours partially abolished this effect. By comparing the tumour-suppressive effects of HRAS and NRAS in oncogenic KRAS- and oncogenic BRAF-driven lung cancer models, we confirm that RAS paralogues are specific suppressors of KRAS-driven lung cancer in vivo. Our study outlines a technological avenue to uncover positive and negative regulators of oncogenic KRAS-driven cancer in a multiplexed manner in vivo and highlights the role RAS paralogue imbalance in oncogenic KRAS-driven lung cancer. Using somatic genome editing and Tuba-seq, Tang et al. uncover a previously uncharacterized role for HRAS and NRAS in impairing KRAS–KRAS interaction to suppress lung tumour growth.
ISSN:1465-7392
1476-4679
DOI:10.1038/s41556-022-01049-w