Person: Sharif, Humayun
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Publication DPP9 sequesters the C terminus of NLRP1 to repress inflammasome activation
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021-03-17) Hollingsworth, L. Robert; Sharif, Humayun; Griswold, Andrew; Fontana, Pietro; Mintseris, Julian; Dagbay, Kevin B.; Paulo, Joao A.; Gygi, Steven; Bachovchin, Daniel A.; Wu, HaoPublication Architecture of Autoinhibited and Active BRAF–MEK1–14-3-3 Complexes
(Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019-10-03) Rawson, Shaun; Kim, Byeong-Won; Sharif, Humayun; Jeon, Hyesung; Park, Eunyoung; Li, Kunhua; Ficarro, Scott; Gonzalez-De Pino, Gonzalo; Marto, Jarrod; Eck, MichaelRAF family kinases are RAS-activated switches that initiate signaling through the MAP kinase cascade to control cellular proliferation, differentiation and survival1-3. RAF activity is tightly regulated and inappropriate activation is a frequent cause of cancer4-6. At present, the structural basis for RAF regulation is poorly understood. Here we describe autoinhibited and active state structures of full-length BRAF in complexes with MEK1 and a 14-3-3 dimer, determined using cryo electron microscopy (cryo-EM). A 4.1Å resolution cryo-EM reconstruction reveals an inactive BRAF/MEK1 complex restrained in a cradle formed by the 14-3-3 dimer, which binds the phosphorylated S365 and S729 sites that flank the BRAF kinase domain. The BRAF cysteine-rich domain (CRD) occupies a central position that stabilizes this assembly, but the adjacent RAS-binding domain (RBD) is poorly ordered and peripheral. The 14-3-3 cradle maintains autoinhibition by sequestering the membrane-binding CRD and blocking dimerization of the BRAF kinase domain. In the active state, these inhibitory interactions are released and a single 14-3-3 dimer rearranges to bridge the C-terminal pS729 binding sites of two BRAFs, driving formation of an active, back-to-back BRAF dimer. Our structural snapshots provide a foundation for understanding normal RAF regulation and its mutational disruption in cancer and developmental syndromes.