TBC-domain GAPs for Rab GTPases accelerate GTP hydrolysis by a dual-finger mechanism
- 1 July 2006
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 442 (7100) , 303-306
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04847
Abstract
Rab GTPases regulate membrane trafficking by cycling between inactive (GDP-bound) and active (GTP-bound) conformations1. The duration of the active state is limited by GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), which accelerate the slow intrinsic rate of GTP hydrolysis. Proteins containing TBC (Tre-2, Bub2 and Cdc16) domains are broadly conserved in eukaryotic organisms and function as GAPs for Rab GTPases as well as GTPases that control cytokinesis2. An exposed arginine residue is a critical determinant of GAP activity in vitro and in vivo3,4,5. It has been expected that the catalytic mechanism of TBC domains would parallel that of Ras and Rho family GAPs. Here we report crystallographic, mutational and functional analyses of complexes between Rab GTPases and the TBC domain of Gyp1p. In the crystal structure of a TBC-domain–Rab-GTPase–aluminium fluoride complex, which approximates the transition-state intermediate for GTP hydrolysis, the TBC domain supplies two catalytic residues in trans, an arginine finger analogous to Ras/Rho family GAPs and a glutamine finger that substitutes for the glutamine in the DxxGQ motif of the GTPase. The glutamine from the Rab GTPase does not stabilize the transition state as expected but instead interacts with the TBC domain. Strong conservation of both catalytic fingers indicates that most TBC-domain GAPs may accelerate GTP hydrolysis by a similar dual-finger mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- A GTPase-activating protein controls Rab5 function in endocytic traffickingNature Cell Biology, 2005
- Structural basis of family-wide Rab GTPase recognition by rabenosyn-5Nature, 2005
- The GTPase-Activating Enzyme Gyp1p Is Required for Recycling of Internalized Membrane Material by Inactivation of the Rab/Ypt GTPase Ypt1pMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2004
- Significance of GTP Hydrolysis in Ypt1p-regulated Endoplasmic Reticulum to Golgi Transport Revealed by the Analysis of Two Novel Ypt1-GAPsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Structural determinants for regulation of phosphodiesterase by a G protein at 2.0 ÅNature, 2001
- Structures of Cdc42 bound to the active and catalytically compromised forms of Cdc42GAPNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 1998
- Identification of a Sec4p GTPase-activating Protein (GAP) as a Novel Member of a Rab GAP FamilyJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1998
- The Ras-RasGAP Complex: Structural Basis for GTPase Activation and Its Loss in Oncogenic Ras MutantsScience, 1997
- GTPase mechanism of Gproteins from the 1.7-Å crystal structure of transducin α - GDP AIF−4Nature, 1994
- A yeast GTPase-activating protein that interacts specifically with a member of the Ypt/Rab familyNature, 1993