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MEK1 is required for PTEN membrane recruitment, AKT regulation, and the maintenance of peripheral tolerance

  • The Raf/MEK/ERK and PI3K/Akt pathways are prominent effectors of oncogenic Ras. These pathways negatively regulate each other, but the mechanism involved is incompletely understood. We now identify MEK1 as an essential regulator of lipid/protein phosphatase PTEN, through which it controls phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate accumulation and AKT signaling. MEK1 ablation stabilizes AKT activation and, in vivo, causes a lupus-like autoimmune disease and myeloproliferation. Mechanistically, MEK1 is necessary for PTEN membrane recruitment as part of a ternary complex containing the multidomain adaptor MAGI1. Complex formation is independent of MEK1 kinase activity but requires phosphorylation of T292 on MEK1 by activated ERK. Thus, inhibiting the ERK pathway reduces PTEN membrane recruitment, increasing phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate accumulation and AKT activation. Our data offer a conceptual framework for the observation that activation of the PI3K pathway frequently mediate resistance to MEK inhibitors and for the promising results obtained by combined MEK/PI3K inhibition in preclinical cancer models.

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Metadaten
Author:Veronika Jesenberger, Katarina Zmajkovicova, Federica Catalanotti, Christian Baumgartner, Gloria Ximena Reyes, Manuela Baccarini
Parent Title (English):Mol. Cell
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Completed Date:2013/04/11
Date of first Publication:2020/11/27
Responsibility for metadata:Fachhochschule Technikum Wien
Release Date:2020/11/27
GND Keyword:MEK1 pathway; membrane recruitment; preclinical cancer models
Volume:2013
Issue:50
First Page:43
Last Page:55
Publish on Website:1
Open Access:0
Reviewed:1
Link to Publication:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23453810/
Department:Department Life Science Engineering
Research Focus:Tissue Engineering & Molecular Life Science Technologies
Projects:Eigenmittel
Studienjahr:2012/2013