4.6 Article

Oncogenic mutation or overexpression of oncogenic KRAS or BRAF is not sufficient to confer oncogene addiction

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249388

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JST, CREST [JPMJCR1654]
  2. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [16KT0069, 16H01425, 18H04754, 18H02444, 19H05798]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19H05798, 18H04754, 16H01425, 18H02444, 16KT0069] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Oncogene addiction is a cellular property in which cancer cells become highly dependent on the expression of oncogenes for their survival, making it a potential target for molecularly targeted drugs. However, the introduction of oncogenic mutation or overexpression of oncogenes alone is not sufficient for cells to acquire oncogene addiction, indicating that it is not associated with transformation activity.
Oncogene addiction is a cellular property by which cancer cells become highly dependent on the expression of oncogenes for their survival. Oncogene addiction can be exploited to design molecularly targeted drugs that kill only cancer cells by inhibiting the specific oncogenes. Genes and cell lines exhibiting oncogene addiction, as well as the mechanisms by which cell death is induced when addicted oncogenes are suppressed, have been extensively studied. However, it is still not fully understood how oncogene addiction is acquired in cancer cells. Here, we take a synthetic biology approach to investigate whether oncogenic mutation or oncogene expression suffices to confer the property of oncogene addiction to cancer cells. We employed human mammary epithelium-derived MCF-10A cells expressing the oncogenic KRAS or BRAF. MCF-10A cells harboring an oncogenic mutation in a single-allele of KRAS or BRAF showed weak transformation activity, but no characteristics of oncogene addiction. MCF-10A cells overexpressing oncogenic KRAS demonstrated the transformation activity, but MCF-10A cells overexpressing oncogenic BRAF did not. Neither cell line exhibited any oncogene addiction properties. These results indicate that the introduction of oncogenic mutation or the overexpression of oncogenes is not sufficient for cells to acquire oncogene addiction, and that oncogene addiction is not associated with transformation activity.

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