Abstract

The proteins of the RAF family (A-RAF, B-RAF, and C-RAF) are serine/threonine kinases that play important roles in development, mature cell regulation, and cancer. Although it is widely held that their localization on membranes is an important aspect of their function, there are few data that address this aspect of their mode of action. Here, we report that each member of the RAF family exhibits a specific distribution at the level of cellular membranes and that C-RAF is the only isoform that directly targets mitochondria. We found that the RAF kinases exhibit intrinsic differences in terms of mitochondrial affinity and that C-RAF is the only isoform that binds this organelle efficiently. This affinity is conferred by the C-RAF amino-terminal domain and does not depend on the presence of RAS GTPases on the surface of mitochondria. Finally, we analyzed the consequences of C-RAF activation on mitochondria and observed that this event dramatically changes their morphology and their subcellular distribution. Our observations indicate that: (i) RAF kinases exhibit different localizations at the level of cellular membranes; (ii) C-RAF is the only isoform that directly binds mitochondria; and (iii) through its functional coupling with MEK, C-RAF regulates the shape and the cellular distribution of mitochondria.

Highlights

  • RAF kinases are a family of Ser/Thr kinases (A-RAF, B-RAF, and C-RAF) that are found upstream of the highly conserved mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)3 signaling module, MEK-ERK

  • RAF Kinases Exhibit Distinct Localizations on Cellular Membrane Organelles— the literature contains multiple fragmentary reports on the ability of RAF kinases to interact with cellular membranes, no comparison has yet been performed among all isoforms

  • A-RAF fluorescence highlighted intracellular tubules and vesicles that we identified as endosomes, and KSR was present on the Golgi apparatus, B-RAF did not associate with intracellular membranes of permeabilized cells

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Summary

Introduction

RAF kinases are a family of Ser/Thr kinases (A-RAF, B-RAF, and C-RAF) that are found upstream of the highly conserved mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)3 signaling module, MEK-ERK. Our observations indicate that: (i) RAF kinases exhibit different localizations at the level of cellular membranes; (ii) C-RAF is the only isoform that directly binds mitochondria; and (iii) through its functional coupling with MEK, C-RAF regulates the shape and the cellular distribution of mitochondria.

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