Fluorescent Cascade and Direct Assays for Characterization of RAF Signaling Pathway Inhibitors

RAF kinases are part of a conserved signaling pathway that impacts cell growth, differentiation, and survival, and RAF pathway dysregulation is an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. We describe two homogeneous fluorescent formats that distinguish RAF pathway inhibitors from direct RAF k...

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Published inCurrent chemical genomics Vol. 1; pp. 43 - 53
Main Authors Kupcho, Kevin R, Bruinsma, Rica, Hallis, Tina M, Lasky, David A, Somberg, Richard L, Turek-Etienne, Tammy, Vogel, Kurt W, Huwiler, Kristin G
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2007
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Summary:RAF kinases are part of a conserved signaling pathway that impacts cell growth, differentiation, and survival, and RAF pathway dysregulation is an attractive target for therapeutic intervention. We describe two homogeneous fluorescent formats that distinguish RAF pathway inhibitors from direct RAF kinase inhibitors, using B-RAF, B-RAF V599E, and C-RAF. A Foerster-resonance energy transfer (FRET) based method was used to develop RAF and MEK cascade assays as well as a direct ERK kinase assay. This method uses a peptide substrate, that is terminally labeled with a FRET-pair of fluorophores, and that is more sensitive to proteolysis relative to the phosphorylated peptide. A second time-resolved FRET-based assay using fluorescently labeled MEK substrate was used to detect direct inhibitors of RAF kinase activity. The cascade assays detect compounds that interact with activated and unactivated kinases within the recapitulated RAF pathway, and the direct assays isolate the point of action for an inhibitor.
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ISSN:1875-3973
1875-3973
DOI:10.2174/1875397300701010043