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Metastasis is the cause of death in 90% of cancer-related deaths in men. Melanoma and Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) are both tumour types with poor prognosis, lacking appropriate therapeutic possibilities, not least because of their high rate of metastasis. Thus understanding the process of metastasis might unravel therapeutic targets for developing further therapeutic strategies. The generation of a transgenic mouse model expressing B-RafV600E in melanocytes, a mutation that is found in about 60% of all melanoma, would result in an ideal tool to study melanoma progression and metastasis. In this work, a doxycycline-inducible system was constructed for expression of B-RafV600E and transgenic animals were generated, but the expression system has to be improved, since this strategy didn’t give rise to any viable, transgene carrying mice. Furthermore, since it was shown in the work of others that the metastatic behavior of tumour cell lines could be reversed by an embryonic microenvironment and the influence of a tumourigenic microenvironment on melanocytes lead to the acquisition of tumour cell-like characteristics, the question arose, whether B-Raf is as important in melanocyte development as it is in melanoma progression. In this work, the embryonal melanocyte development in B-Raf-deficient and wildtype mouse embryos was examined and there were no differences observed in the localization and number of neural crest stem cells as well as in the localization of the dopachrome-tautomerase positive melanoblasts in the embryos and in cultured neural tube explants. The expression of oncogenic C-Raf in lung epithelial cells has yielded a model for NSCLC giving rise to adenomas lacking spontaneous progression or metastasis. The co-expression of c-Myc in the same cells accelerates the tumour development and gives rise to liver and lymphnode metastases. The expression of c-Myc alone in lung epithelial cells leads to late tumour development with incomplete penetrance. A mutation screen in this work resulted in the observation that a secondary mutation in KRas or LKB1 is necessary for tumour formation in the c-Myc single transgenic animals and suggested metastasis as an early event, since the corresponding metastases of the mutation-prone primary lung tumours were negative for the observed mutations. Furthermore, in this work it was shown that the expression of chicken c-Myc in a non-metastatic NSCLC cell line leads to metastatic clones, showing that c-Myc is sufficient to induce metastasis. Additionally a panel of metastasis markers was identified, that might serve as diagnostic markers in the future.
The Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade is a central cellular signal transduction pathway involved in cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival where RAF kinases are pivotal kinases implicated in cancer. The development of specific irreversible kinase inhibitors is a rewarding but difficult aim. CI-1033 was developed to irreversibly inhibit erbB receptor tyrosine kinases by reacting to the Cys113 residue (p38alpha MAP kinase numbering) of the kinase domain. In this study we tried a similar approach to target the RAF oncoproteins which posses a similar cysteine at position 108 in the hinge region between the small n-lobe and the large c-lobe of the kinase domain. A novel synthetic approach including a lyophilization step allowed us the synthesis of a diphenyl urea compound with an epoxide moiety (compound 1). Compound 1 possessed inhibitory activity in vitro. However our time kinetics experiments and mass spectroscopic studies clearly indicate that compound 1 does not react covalently with the cysteine residue in the hinge region. Moreover, in cell culture experiments, a strong activation of the RAF signaling pathway was observed, an effect which is known from several other RAF kinase inhibitors and is here reported for the first time for a diphenyl urea compound, to which the clinically used unspecific kinase inhibitor BAY 43-9006 (Sorafinib, Nexavar) belongs. Although activation was apparently independent on B- and C-RAF hetero-oligomerization in vitro, in vivo experiments support such a mechanism as the activation did not occur in starved knockout cells lacking either B-RAF or C-RAF. Furthermore, we developed a mathematical model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade demonstrating how stimuli induce different signal patterns and thereby different cellular responses, depending on cell type and the ratio between B-RAF and C-RAF. Based on biochemical data for activation and dephosphorylation, we set up differential equations for a dynamical model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade. We find a different signaling pattern and response result for B-RAF (strong activation, sustained signal) and C-RAF (steep activation, transient signal). We further support the significance of such differential modulatory signaling by showing different RAF isoform expression in various cell lines and experimental testing of the predicted kinase activities in B-RAF, C-RAF as well as mutated versions. Additionally the effect of the tumor suppressor DiRas3 (also known as Noey2 or ARHI) on RAF signaling was studied. I could show that DiRas3 down-regulates the mitogenic pathway by inhibition of MEK, a basis for a refined model of the Ras/RAF/MEK/ERK cascade.