4.7 Article

Role of BRAF-V600E in the serrated pathway of colorectal tumourigenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 212, Issue 2, Pages 124-133

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/path.2160

Keywords

BRAF-V600E; colorectal cancer; MSI-H; CIMP; DNA methylation; sessile serrated adenoma

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There is increasing evidence for an alternative pathway of sporadic colorectal tumourigenesis that is associated with DNA microsatellite instability (MSI), due to methylation and loss of expression of the mismatch repair gene MLH1. Recent studies have highlighted a serrated pathway of colorectal cancer (CRC) in which serrated polyps with activating mutations in BRAF progress to CRCs with NISI following methylation and silencing of MLH1. The present study provides a novel mechanistic experimental model for these clinical observations. We investigated the role of BRAF activating mutation (BRAF-V600E) in colorectal tumourigenesis by studying the effects of forced expression of BRAF-V600E in the 'normal' colon epithelial NCM460 cell line and by targeting endogenous BRAF-V600E in NISI-High (MSI-H) colon cancer cell lines. The findings indicate that BRAF mutation in colon epithelial cells contributes to a gain in resistance towards apoptotic stimuli, which is likely to be an important characteristic of pre-malignant serrated lesions. BRAF-V600E also plays a role in the development and maintenance of transformed and invasive phenotypes in colon epithelial cells. Our findings also suggest that BRAF mutation potentiates promoter hypermethylation of the MLH1 gene promoter. Together, these results highlight BRAF as a potential target for therapeutic intervention in sporadic MSI-H colorectal cancers. Copyright ((C) 2007 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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