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Hotspot Exon 15 Mutations in BRAF Are Uncommon in Feline Tumours.

Kei KurokiChristine Tran HoangAnita M RogicHans RindtAngelynn SimensonLucie G NoallJeffrey N BryanGayle C JohnsonShirley Chu
Published in: Veterinary and comparative oncology (2024)
BRAF is one of multiple RAF proteins responsible for the activation of the MAPK cell signalling cascade involved in cell growth, differentiation, and survival. A hotspot BRAF V600E mutation, in exon 15, was determined to be a driver in 100% hairy cell leukaemias, 50%-60% of human melanomas, 30%-50% of human thyroid carcinomas and 10%-20% of human colorectal carcinomas. The orthologous BRAF V595E mutation was seen in 67% and 80% of canine bladder transitional cell carcinomas and prostatic adenocarcinomas, respectively. Since veterinary and human cancers exploit similar pathways and BRAF is highly conserved across species, BRAF can be expected to be a driver in a feline cancer. Primers were developed to amplify exon 15 of feline BRAF. One hundred ninety-six feline tumours were analysed. Sanger sequencing of the 211 bp PCR amplicon was done. A BRAF mutation was found in one tumour, a cutaneous melanoma. The mutation was a BRAF V597E mutation, orthologous to the canine and human hotspot mutations. A common synonymous variant, BRAF T586T , was seen in 23% (47/196) of tumours. This variant was suspected to be a single nucleotide polymorphism. BRAF was not frequently mutated in common feline tumours or in tumour types that frequently harbour BRAF mutations in human and canine cancers. As is seen in canine cancer genomics, the mutational profile in feline tumours may not parallel the histologic equivalent in human oncology.
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