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Cutting the Brakes on Ras—Cytoplasmic GAPs as Targets of Inactivation in Cancer
by
Collavin, Licio
, Bellazzo, Arianna
in
Adaptor proteins
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cell activation
/ Genes
/ Guanosine triphosphatase
/ Health aspects
/ Kinases
/ Leukemia
/ Liver cancer
/ Medical prognosis
/ Melanoma
/ Molecular modelling
/ Mutation
/ Ovarian cancer
/ Point mutation
/ Proteins
/ Ras protein
/ Recovery of function
/ Review
/ Stromal cells
/ Thyroid cancer
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumors
2020
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Cutting the Brakes on Ras—Cytoplasmic GAPs as Targets of Inactivation in Cancer
by
Collavin, Licio
, Bellazzo, Arianna
in
Adaptor proteins
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cell activation
/ Genes
/ Guanosine triphosphatase
/ Health aspects
/ Kinases
/ Leukemia
/ Liver cancer
/ Medical prognosis
/ Melanoma
/ Molecular modelling
/ Mutation
/ Ovarian cancer
/ Point mutation
/ Proteins
/ Ras protein
/ Recovery of function
/ Review
/ Stromal cells
/ Thyroid cancer
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumors
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Cutting the Brakes on Ras—Cytoplasmic GAPs as Targets of Inactivation in Cancer
by
Collavin, Licio
, Bellazzo, Arianna
in
Adaptor proteins
/ Breast cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cell activation
/ Genes
/ Guanosine triphosphatase
/ Health aspects
/ Kinases
/ Leukemia
/ Liver cancer
/ Medical prognosis
/ Melanoma
/ Molecular modelling
/ Mutation
/ Ovarian cancer
/ Point mutation
/ Proteins
/ Ras protein
/ Recovery of function
/ Review
/ Stromal cells
/ Thyroid cancer
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumors
2020
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Cutting the Brakes on Ras—Cytoplasmic GAPs as Targets of Inactivation in Cancer
Journal Article
Cutting the Brakes on Ras—Cytoplasmic GAPs as Targets of Inactivation in Cancer
2020
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Overview
The Ras pathway is frequently deregulated in cancer, actively contributing to tumor development and progression. Oncogenic activation of the Ras pathway is commonly due to point mutation of one of the three Ras genes, which occurs in almost one third of human cancers. In the absence of Ras mutation, the pathway is frequently activated by alternative means, including the loss of function of Ras inhibitors. Among Ras inhibitors, the GTPase-Activating Proteins (RasGAPs) are major players, given their ability to modulate multiple cancer-related pathways. In fact, most RasGAPs also have a multi-domain structure that allows them to act as scaffold or adaptor proteins, affecting additional oncogenic cascades. In cancer cells, various mechanisms can cause the loss of function of Ras inhibitors; here, we review the available evidence of RasGAP inactivation in cancer, with a specific focus on the mechanisms. We also consider extracellular inputs that can affect RasGAP levels and functions, implicating that specific conditions in the tumor microenvironment can foster or counteract Ras signaling through negative or positive modulation of RasGAPs. A better understanding of these conditions might have relevant clinical repercussions, since treatments to restore or enhance the function of RasGAPs in cancer would help circumvent the intrinsic difficulty of directly targeting the Ras protein.
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