ERRFI1 (ERBB receptor feedback inhibitor 1)

2008-04-01   Yu-Wen Zhang 

Van Andel Research Institute, 333 Bostwick Ave. NE, Grand Rapids, MI 49503, USA

Identity

HGNC
LOCATION
1p36.23
LOCUSID
ALIAS
GENE-33,MIG-6,MIG6,RALT
FUSION GENES

DNA/RNA

Description

The MIG-6 gene is composed of 4 exons, and its coding region spans from exon 2 to within exon 4.

Transcription

MIG-6 transcription can be rapidly up-regulated by many stress stimuli such as mechanical forces, injury and hypoxia, and by serum as well as various growth factors including EGF and HGF/SF. It is regulated during cell cycle progression, and peaks at the mid-G1 phase. The transcription results in a 3.1-kb mRNA.

Proteins

Atlas Image
MIG-6 genomic and protein structures. Exons: E1 to E4; coding regions: blue boxes; non-coding regions: orange boxes; CRIB: Cdc42/Rac-interaction and binding domain; AH region: ACK1 homology region; EBR: EGFR-binding region; 14-3-3 BD: 14-3-3 binding motif; SH3 BD: Src homology-3 domain binding motifs; two PEST sequences are indicated in red boxes.

Description

MIG-6 is a 58-kDa non-kinase scaffolding adaptor protein consisting of 462 amino-acids. Several conserved protein-protein interaction motifs/domains are present in this protein: a CRIB domain is in the N-terminus, and has been shown to interact with CDC42 and IκBα ; multiple proline-rich motifs are present in the middle of the molecule, and can bind to SH3 domain containing proteins like GRB2; and a 14-3-3 protein binding motif and two PEST sequences are also present. A large portion of its C-terminus (AH domain) shares a high homology with ACK1 kinase, and an EGFR-binding domain is mapped within this region.

Expression

MIG-6 is highly expressed in the liver and kidney. Moderate to low expression is observed in the brain, lung, placenta, heart, thymus, and some other tissues.

Localisation

It is mainly localized in the cytoplasm.

Function

MIG-6 is a negative feedback regulator of EGFR and Met receptor tyrosine kinase signaling. MIG-6 inhibits EGFR-mediated cell transformation and cell cycle progression in NIH3T3 cells. It can physically interact with EGFR, causing inhibition of EGFR phosphorylation and downstream activation. This inhibition is likely due to a blockage of EGFR dimer formation by MIG-6, as a crystal structure reveals binding of MIG-6 to the EGFR kinase domain interface. MIG-6 inhibits Met-mediated cell migration, likely through blocking HGF/SF-induced CDC42 activation (although it does not physically interact with Met). Expression of MIG-6 has also been shown to activate NFκB by sequestering IκBα. The involvement of other MIG-6-interacting molecules in regulating the signaling output remains to be determined.
MIG-6 may function as a tumor suppressor gene, and is likely to play an important role in skin morphogenesis, tissue homeostasis and stress response. Disruption of Mig-6 results in hyperproliferation of the cells in the tissues like joint, gallbladder and skin. Mice with Mig-6 deficiency are prone to the formation of lung, gallbladder, bile duct, and skin cancers, and they develop early onset degenerative joint disease in heavily used joints. Reduced expression of MIG-6 has been observed in several human cancers including breast, ovarian, and skin cancers. While rare, mutations in MIG-6 have also been identified in human lung cancer.

Mutations

Germinal

A heterozygous germline mutation at MIG-6 codon 373 (Ala → Val) has been identified in a primary lung cancer patient with squamous cell carcinoma.

Somatic

Two somatic mutations have been identified in non-small cell lung cancer cell lines: a nonsense mutation at codon 83 (Glu → stop codon) in the NCI-H322 adenocarcinoma cell line; and a missense mutation at codon 109 (Asp → Asn) in the NCI-H226 squamous cell carcinoma cell line.

Implicated in

Entity name
Various human cancers
Note
The MIG-6 gene is located at chromosome 1p36, a locus that is frequently associated with human cancers. Decreased expression of MIG-6 is reported in breast, ovarian, pancreatic, and skin cancers. Several mutations have been identified in lung cancer, and loss of heterozygosity seems to be associated with smoking, squamous cell carcinoma, and late-stage lung cancer patients.

Bibliography

Pubmed IDLast YearTitleAuthors

Other Information

Locus ID:

NCBI: 54206
MIM: 608069
HGNC: 18185
Ensembl: ENSG00000116285

Variants:

dbSNP: 54206
ClinVar: 54206
TCGA: ENSG00000116285
COSMIC: ERRFI1

RNA/Proteins

Gene IDTranscript IDUniprot
ENSG00000116285ENST00000377482Q9UJM3
ENSG00000116285ENST00000377482I6S2Y9
ENSG00000116285ENST00000467067K7EJB4
ENSG00000116285ENST00000469499K7EMD2
ENSG00000116285ENST00000474874K7ENI4
ENSG00000116285ENST00000487559K7ENN7

Expression (GTEx)

0
50
100
150
200
250
300

References

Pubmed IDYearTitleCitations
180464152007Inhibition of the EGF receptor by binding of MIG6 to an activating kinase domain interface.138
110036692000Inhibition of ErbB-2 mitogenic and transforming activity by RALT, a mitogen-induced signal transducer which binds to the ErbB-2 kinase domain.58
168195042007Evidence that MIG-6 is a tumor-suppressor gene.54
128331452003Feedback inhibition by RALT controls signal output by the ErbB network.49
204214272010A two-tiered mechanism of EGFR inhibition by RALT/MIG6 via kinase suppression and receptor degradation.49
155569442005Gene 33 is an endogenous inhibitor of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor signaling and mediates dexamethasone-induced suppression of EGF function.47
203512672010Mig-6 controls EGFR trafficking and suppresses gliomagenesis.45
248307242014The TGFβ-miR200-MIG6 pathway orchestrates the EMT-associated kinase switch that induces resistance to EGFR inhibitors.45
244250482014microRNA-148a is a prognostic oncomiR that targets MIG6 and BIM to regulate EGFR and apoptosis in glioblastoma.44
194396672009Mig-6 modulates uterine steroid hormone responsiveness and exhibits altered expression in endometrial disease.42

Citation

Yu-Wen Zhang

ERRFI1 (ERBB receptor feedback inhibitor 1)

Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2008-04-01

Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/gene/44147/js/lib/jquery-3.5.1.min.js