Relationship among guanine nucleotide exchange, GTP hydrolysis, and transforming potential of mutated ras proteins.
Open Access
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 8 (6) , 2472-2478
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.8.6.2472
Abstract
The effect of a series of mutations on the transforming potential of normal human rasH has been compared with their effects on GTPase and guanine nucleotide exchange rates of p21. The mutation Val-146 resulted in partial activation of transforming potential which could be attributed to a greater than 1,000-fold-increased rate of nucleotide exchange in the absence of an effect on GTPase. In contrast, the more modest enhancement of exchange rate (approximately 100-fold) which resulted from the mutation Met-14 did not affect biological activity. The partially activating mutation Thr-59 was found to result in both a 5-fold reduction in GTPase and a 10-fold increase in nucleotide exchange. However, the nontransforming mutant Ile-59 displayed a comparable decrease in GTPase without an effect on nucleotide exchange. The activating effect of the Thr-59 mutation may thus represent a combined effect of reduced GTPase and increased exchange. Similarly, the strongly activating mutation Leu-61 resulted in a fivefold increase in nucleotide exchange in addition to decreased GTPase, whereas weakly activating mutations at position 61 (Trp and Pro) resulted only in decreased GTPase without affecting nucleotide exchange rates. Finally, combining the two mutations Met-14 and Ile-59, which alone had no effect on biological activity, yielded a double mutant with a 20-fold increased transforming potential, demonstrating a synergistic effect of these two mutations. Overall, these results indicate that large increases in nucleotide exchange can activate ras transforming potential in the absence of decreased GTPase and that relatively modest increases in nucleotide exchange can act synergistically with decreased GTPase to contribute to ras activation.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Cytoplasmic Protein Stimulates Normal N- ras p21 GTPase, But Does Not Affect Oncogenic MutantsScience, 1987
- ras GENESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1987
- G PROTEINS: TRANSDUCERS OF RECEPTOR-GENERATED SIGNALSAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1987
- The Oncogenic Activation of Human p21
ras
by a Novel MechanismScience, 1986
- Ras p21 proteins with high or low GTPase activity can efficiently transform NIH3T3 cellsCell, 1986
- Biological and biochemical properties of human rasH genes mutated at codon 61Cell, 1986
- Ha-ras proteins exhibit GTPase activity: point mutations that activate Ha-ras gene products result in decreased GTPase activity.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1985
- The product of ras is a GTPase and the T24 oncogenic mutant is deficient in this activityNature, 1984
- Construction and applications of a highly transmissible murine retrovirus shuttle vectorCell, 1984
- Transfection by exogenous and endogenous murine retrovirus DNAsCell, 1979