C-terminal sequences in R-Ras are involved in integrin regulation and in plasma membrane microdomain distribution


Autoria(s): Hansen, M.; Prior, I. A.; Hughes, P. E.; Oertli, B.; Chou, F. L.; Willumsen, B. M.; Hancock, J. F.; Ginsberg, M. H.
Contribuinte(s)

W. Baumeister

Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

The small GTPases R-Ras and H-Ras are highly homologous proteins with contrasting biological properties, for example, they differentially modulate integrin affinity: H-Ras suppresses integrin activation in fibroblasts whereas R-Ras can reverse this effect of H-Ras. To gain insight into the sequences directing this divergent phenotype, we investigated a panel of H-Ras/R-Ras chimeras and found that sequences in the R-Ras hypervariable C-terminal region including amino acids 175-203 are required for the R-Ras ability to increase integrin activation in CHO cells; however, the proline-rich site in this region, previously reported to bind the adaptor protein Nck, was not essential for this effect. In addition, we found that the GTPase TC21 behaved similarly to R-Ras. Because the C-termini of Ras proteins can control their subcellular localization, we compared the localization of H-Ras and R-Ras. In contrast to H-Ras, which migrates out of lipid rafts upon activation, we found that activated R-Ras remained localized to lipid rafts. However, functionally distinct H-Ras/R-Ras chimeras containing different C-terminal R-Ras segments localized to lipid rafts irrespective of their integrin phenotype. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64672

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Academic Press

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Biophysics #R-ras #H-ras #Integrin Affinity Modulation #Subcellular Localization #Out Signal-transduction #Cytoplasmic Domains #Adapter Protein #Gene-product #Kinase Pak1 #Map Kinase #Activation #Transformation #Suppression #C1 #270104 Membrane Biology #730108 Cancer and related disorders
Tipo

Journal Article