Dominant inhibitory Ras mutants selectively inhibit the activity of either cellular or oncogenic Ras.
Open Access
- 1 August 1991
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 11 (8) , 4053-4064
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.11.8.4053
Abstract
Two dominant inhibitory Ras mutant proteins were analyzed by microinjection. One, [Asn-17]Ras, had a substitution in the putative Mg(2+)-binding site of Ha-Ras. The other, RAST, had a mutation in a yeast RAS protein that impaired its GTPase activity and increased its affinity for GAP. RAST also had a mutation that blocked its localization to the plasma membrane. In NIH 3T3 cells [Asn-17]Ras inhibited the function of normal Ras much more efficiently than that of oncogenic Ras. In contrast, RAST interfered with the transforming activity of oncogenic Ras more efficiently than that of normal Ras. These conclusions were based on two separate types of analysis. The inhibitory Ras mutant proteins were first microinjected into cells stably transformed either by oncogenic Ras or by high levels of expression of cellular Ras. Results obtained in stably transformed cells were then verified by coinjection of the inhibitory Ras mutant proteins together with transforming concentrations of either oncogenic or normal Ras protein. Whereas RAST was active in soluble form. [Asn-17]Ras required membrane localization for activity. Furthermore, mutations in the GAP/effector-binding domain reduced or eliminated the inhibitory activity of RAST but had no detectable effect on [Asn-17]Ras. These results are consistent with the possibility that [Asn-17]Ras functions by blocking the activation of endogenous Ras proteins, while RAST functions by blocking the ability of activated Ras to stimulate a downstream target within the cells. The properties of RAST suggest that interference with the GAP/effector-binding function of RAS represents a strategy for the preferential inactivation of oncogenic Ras in cells.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preferential inhibition of the oncogenic form of RasH by mutations in the GAP binding/“effector” domainCell, 1991
- A Cytoplasmic Protein Inhibits the GTPase Activity of H-Ras in a Phospholipid-Dependent MannerScience, 1990
- Stimulation of p21ras upon T-cell activationNature, 1990
- A Cytosolic Protein Catalyzes the Release of GDP from p21
ras
Science, 1990
- S. cerevisiae genes IRA1 and IRA2 encode proteins that may be functionally equivalent to mammalian ras GTPase activating proteinCell, 1990
- A novel membrane factor stimulates guanine nucleotide exchange reaction of ras proteinsFEBS Letters, 1990
- Genetic analysis of mammalian GAP expressed in yeastCell, 1989
- The cytoplasmic protein GAP is implicated as the target for regulation by the ras gene productNature, 1988
- The S. cerevisiae CDC25 gene product regulates the RAS/adenylate cyclase pathwayCell, 1987
- Requirement for c-ras proteins during viral oncogene transformationNature, 1986