Publication date: 27 February 2018
Source:Cell Reports, Volume 22, Issue 9
Author(s): Amanda R. Moore, Leili Ran, Youxin Guan, Jessica J. Sher, Tyler D. Hitchman, Jenny Q. Zhang, Catalina Hwang, Edward G. Walzak, Alexander N. Shoushtari, Sébastien Monette, Rajmohan Murali, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Ping Chi, Yu Chen
Uveal melanoma (UM) is characterized by mutually exclusive activating mutations in GNAQ, GNA11, CYSLTR2, and PLCB4, four genes in a linear pathway to activation of PLCβ in almost all tumors and loss of BAP1 in the aggressive subset. We generated mice with melanocyte-specific expression of GNA11Q209L with and without homozygous Bap1 loss. The GNA11Q209L mice recapitulated human Gq-associated melanomas, and they developed pigmented neoplastic lesions from melanocytes of the skin and non-cutaneous organs, including the eye and leptomeninges, as well as at atypical sites, including the lymph nodes and lungs. The addition of Bap1 loss increased tumor proliferation and cutaneous melanoma size. Integrative transcriptome analysis of human and murine melanomas identified RasGRP3 to be specifically expressed in GNAQ/GNA11-driven melanomas. In human UM cell lines and murine models, RasGRP3 is specifically required for GNAQ/GNA11-driven Ras activation and tumorigenesis. This implicates RasGRP3 as a critical node and a potential target in UM.
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Moore et al. generate a preclinical mouse model of melanoma that recapitulates features of aggressive uveal melanoma. By comparing murine and human melanomas, they identify a dependency on RasGRP3 in uveal melanoma.http://ift.tt/2HQ8aWV
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