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1.
K-Ras associates with the plasma membrane (PM) through farnesylation that functions in conjunction with an adjacent polybasic sequence. We show that phosphorylation by protein kinase C (PKC) of S181 within the polybasic region promotes rapid dissociation of K-Ras from the PM and association with intracellular membranes, including the outer membrane of mitochondria where phospho-K-Ras interacts with Bcl-XL. PKC agonists promote apoptosis of cells transformed with oncogenic K-Ras in a S181-dependent manner. K-Ras with a phosphomimetic residue at position 181 induces apoptosis via a pathway that requires Bcl-XL. The PKC agonist bryostatin-1 inhibited the growth in vitro and in vivo of cells transformed with oncogenic K-Ras in a S181-dependent fashion. These data demonstrate that the location and function of K-Ras are regulated directly by PKC and suggest an approach to therapy of K-Ras-dependent tumors with agents that stimulate phosphorylation of S181.  相似文献   

2.
Farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) block Ras farnesylation, subcellular localization and activity, and inhibit the growth of Ras-transformed cells. Although FTIs are ineffective against K-Ras4B, the Ras isoform most commonly mutated in human cancers, they can inhibit the growth of tumors containing oncogenic K-Ras4B, implicating other farnesylated proteins or suggesting distinct functions for farnesylated and for geranylgeranylated K-Ras, which is generated when farnesyltransferase is inhibited. In addition to bypassing FTI blockade through geranylgeranylation, K-Ras4B resistance to FTIs may also result from its higher affinity for farnesyltransferase. Using chimeric Ras proteins containing all combinations of Ras background, CAAX motif, and K-Ras polybasic domain, we show that either a polybasic domain or an alternatively prenylated CAAX renders Ras prenylation, Ras-induced Elk-1 activation, and anchorage-independent cell growth FTI-resistant. The polybasic domain alone increases the affinity of Ras for farnesyltransferase, implying independent roles for each K-Ras4B sequence element in FTI resistance. Using microarray analysis and colony formation assays, we confirm that K-Ras function is independent of the identity of the prenyl group and, therefore, that FTI inhibition of K-Ras transformed cells is likely to be independent of K-Ras inhibition. Our results imply that relevant FTI targets will lack both polybasic and potentially geranylgeranylated methionine-CAAX motifs.  相似文献   

3.
Ras proteins regulate signaling pathways important for cell growth, differentiation, and survival. Oncogenic mutant Ras proteins are commonly expressed in human tumors, with mutations of the K-Ras isoform being most prevalent. To be active, K-Ras must undergo posttranslational processing and associate with the plasma membrane. We therefore devised a high-content screening assay to search for inhibitors of K-Ras plasma membrane association. Using this assay, we identified fendiline, an L-type calcium channel blocker, as a specific inhibitor of K-Ras plasma membrane targeting with no detectable effect on the localization of H- and N-Ras. Other classes of L-type calcium channel blockers did not mislocalize K-Ras, suggesting a mechanism that is unrelated to calcium channel blockade. Fendiline did not inhibit K-Ras posttranslational processing but significantly reduced nanoclustering of K-Ras and redistributed K-Ras from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Golgi apparatus, endosomes, and cytosol. Fendiline significantly inhibited signaling downstream of constitutively active K-Ras and endogenous K-Ras signaling in cells transformed by oncogenic H-Ras. Consistent with these effects, fendiline blocked the proliferation of pancreatic, colon, lung, and endometrial cancer cell lines expressing oncogenic mutant K-Ras. Taken together, these results suggest that inhibitors of K-Ras plasma membrane localization may have utility as novel K-Ras-specific anticancer therapeutics.  相似文献   

4.
K-Ras4B, a frequently mutated oncogene in cancer, plays an essential role in cell growth, differentiation, and survival. Its C-terminal membrane-associated hypervariable region (HVR) is required for full biological activity. In the active GTP-bound state, the HVR interacts with acidic plasma membrane (PM) headgroups, whereas the farnesyl anchors in the membrane; in the inactive GDP-bound state, the HVR may interact with both the PM and the catalytic domain at the effector binding region, obstructing signaling and nucleotide exchange. Here, using molecular dynamics simulations and NMR, we aim to figure out the effects of nucleotides (GTP and GDP) and frequent (G12C, G12D, G12V, G13D, and Q61H) and infrequent (E37K and R164Q) oncogenic mutations on full-length K-Ras4B. The mutations are away from or directly at the HVR switch I/effector binding site. Our results suggest that full-length wild-type GDP-bound K-Ras4B (K-Ras4BWT-GDP) is in an intrinsically autoinhibited state via tight HVR-catalytic domain interactions. The looser association in K-Ras4BWT-GTP may release the HVR. Some of the oncogenic mutations weaken the HVR-catalytic domain association in the K-Ras4B-GDP/-GTP bound states, which may facilitate the HVR disassociation in a nucleotide-independent manner, thereby up-regulating oncogenic Ras signaling. Thus, our results suggest that mutations can exert their effects in more than one way, abolishing GTP hydrolysis and facilitating effector binding.  相似文献   

5.
Targeting of K-Ras 4B by S-trans,trans-farnesyl thiosalicylic acid   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Ras proteins regulate cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Their activities depend on their anchorage to the inner surface of the plasma membrane, which is promoted by their common carboxy-terminal S-farnesylcysteine and either a stretch of lysine residues (K-Ras 4B) or S-palmitoyl moieties (H-Ras, N-Ras and K-Ras 4A). We previously demonstrated dislodgment of H-Ras from EJ cell membranes by S-trans,trans-farnesylthiosalicylic acid (FTS), and proposed that FTS disrupts the interactions between the S-prenyl moiety of Ras and the membrane anchorage domains. In support of this hypothesis, we now show that FTS, which is not a farnesyltransferase inhibitor, inhibits growth of NIH3T3 cells transformed by the non-palmitoylated K-Ras 4B(12V) or by its farnesylated, but unmethylated, K-Ras 4B(12) CVYM mutant. The growth-inhibitory effects of FTS followed the dislodgment and accelerated degradation of K-Ras 4B(12V), leading in turn to a decrease in its amount in the cells and inhibition of MAPK activity. FTS did not affect the rate of degradation of the K-Ras 4B, SVIM mutant which is not modified post-translationally, suggesting that only farnesylated Ras isoforms are substrates for facilitated degradation. The putative Ras-recognition sites (within domains in the cell membrane) appear to tolerate both C(15) and C(20) S-prenyl moeities, since geranylgeranyl thiosalicylic acid mimicked the growth-inhibitory effects of FTS in K-Ras 4B(12V)-transformed cells and FTS inhibited the growth of cells transformed by the geranylgeranylated K-Ras 4B(12V) CVIL isoform. The results suggest that FTS acts as a domain-targeted compound that disrupts Ras-membrane interactions. The fact that FTS can target K-Ras 4B(12V), which is insensitive to inhibition by farnesyltransfarase inhibitors, suggests that FTS may target Ras (and other prenylated proteins important for transformed cell growth) in an efficient manner that speaks well for its potential as an anticancer therapeutic agent.  相似文献   

6.
Ras proteins (H-, N-, and K-Ras) operate as molecular switches in signal transduction cascades controlling cell proliferation, differentiation, or apoptosis. The interaction of Ras with its effectors is mediated by the effector-binding loop, but different data about Ras location to plasma membrane subdomains and new roles for some docking/scaffold proteins point to signaling specificities of the different Ras proteins. To investigate the molecular mechanisms for these specificities, we compared an effector loop mutation (P34G) of three Ras isoforms (H-, N-, and K-Ras4B) for their biological and biochemical properties. Although this mutation diminished the capacity of Ras proteins to activate the Raf/ERK and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/AKT pathways, the H-Ras V12G34 mutant retained the ability to cause morphological transformation of NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, whereas both the N-Ras V12G34 and the K-Ras4B V12G34 mutants were defective in this biological activity. On the other hand, although both the N-Ras V12G34 and the K-Ras4B V12G34 mutants failed to promote activation of the Ral-GDS/Ral A/PLD and the Ras/Rac pathways, the H-Ras V12G34 mutant retained the ability to activate these signaling pathways. Interestingly, the P34G mutation reduced specifically the N-Ras and K-Ras4B in vitro binding affinity to Ral-GDS, but not in the case of H-Ras. Thus, independently of Ras location to membrane subdomains, there are marked differences among Ras proteins in the sensitivity to an identical mutation (P34G) affecting the highly conserved effector-binding loop.  相似文献   

7.
Mutation of K-Ras is a frequent oncogenic event in human cancers, particularly cancers of lungs, pancreas, and colon. It remains unclear why some tissues are more susceptible to Ras-induced transformation than others. Here, we globally activated a mutant oncogenic K-Ras allele (K-Ras(G12D)) in mice and examined the tissue-specific effects of this activation on cancer pathobiology, Ras signaling, tumor suppressor, DNA damage, and inflammatory responses. Within 5 to 6 weeks of oncogenic Ras activation, mice develop oral and gastric papillomas, lung adenomas, and hematopoietic hyperproliferation and turn moribund. The oral, gastric, and lung premalignant lesions display activated extracellular signal-regulated kinases (Erk)1/2 and NF-κB signaling as well as activated tumor suppressor and DNA damage responses. Other organs such as pancreas, liver, and small intestine do not exhibit neoplastic progression within 6 weeks following K-Ras(G12D) activation and do not show a potent tumor suppressor response. Even though robust Erk1/2 signaling is activated in all the tissues examined, the pErk1/2 distribution remains largely cytoplasmic in K-Ras(G12D)-refractory tissues (pancreas, liver, and intestines) as opposed to a predominantly nuclear localization in K-Ras(G12D)-induced neoplasms of lung, oral, and gastric mucosa. The downstream targets of Ras signaling, pElk-1 and c-Myc, are elevated in K-Ras(G12D)-induced neoplastic lesions but not in K-Ras(G12D)-refractory tissues. We propose that oncogenic K-Ras-refractory tissues delay oncogenic progression by spatially limiting the efficacy of Ras/Raf/Erk1/2 signaling, whereas K-Ras-responsive tissues exhibit activated Ras/Raf/Erk1/2 signaling, rapidly form premalignant tumors, and activate potent antitumor responses that effectively prevent further malignant progression.  相似文献   

8.
Plasma membrane targeting of Ras requires CAAX motif modifications together with a second signal from an adjacent polybasic domain or nearby cysteine palmitoylation sites. N-terminal myristoylation is known to restore membrane binding to H-ras C186S (C-186 is changed to S), a mutant protein in which all CAAX processing is abolished. We show here that myristoylated H-ras C186S is a substrate for palmitoyltransferase, despite the absence of C-terminal farnesylation, and that palmitoylation is absolutely required for plasma membrane targeting of myristoylated H-ras. Similarly, the polybasic domain is required for specific plasma membrane targeting of myristoylated K-ras. In contrast, the combination of myristoylation plus farnesylation results in the mislocalization of Ras to numerous intracellular membranes. Ras that is only myristoylated does not bind with a high affinity to any membrane. The specific targeting of Ras to the plasma membrane is therefore critically dependent on signals that are contained in the hypervariable domain but can be supported by N-terminal myristoylation or C-terminal prenylation. Interestingly, oncogenic Ras G12V that is localized correctly to the plasma membrane leads to mitogen-activated protein kinase activation irrespective of the combination of targeting signals used for localization, whereas Ras G12V that is mislocalized to the cytosol or to other membranes activates mitogen-activated protein kinase only if the Ras protein is farnesylated.  相似文献   

9.
Ras GTPase-activating protein (RasGAP) is hypothesized to be an effector of oncogenic Ras stimulating numerous downstream cellular signaling cascades involved in survival, proliferation and motility. In this study, we identified calpain small subunit-1 (Capns1) as a new RasGAP-SH3 domain binding partner, using yeast two-hybrid screening. The interaction was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation assay and was found specific to cells expressing oncogenic K-Ras. We used confocal microscopy to analyze our stably transfected cell model producing mutant Ras (PC3Ras(V12)). Staining for RasGAP-SH3/Capns1 co-localization was two-fold stronger in the protrusions of Ras(V12) cells than in PC3 cells. RasGAP or Capns1 knockdown in PC3Ras(V12) cells induced a two- to three-fold increase in apoptosis. Capns1 gene silencing reduced the speed and increased the persistence of movement in PC3Ras(V12) cells. In contrast, RasGAP knockdown in PC3Ras(V12) cells increased cell migration. Knockdown of both proteins altered the speed and directionality of cell motility. Our findings suggest that RasGAP and Capns1 interaction in oncogenic Ras cells is involved in regulating migration and cell survival.  相似文献   

10.
Expression of activated H-Ras induces a unique form of non-apoptotic cell death in human glioblastoma cells and other specific tumor cell lines. The major cytopathological features of this form of death are the accumulation of large phase-lucent, LAMP1-positive, cytoplasmic vacuoles. In this study we sought to determine if induction of cytoplasmic vacuolation a) depends on Ras farnesylation, b) is specific to H-Ras, and c) is mediated by signaling through the major known Ras effector pathways. We find that the unusual effects of activated H-Ras depend on farnesylation and membrane association of the GTPase. Both H-Ras(G12V) and K-Ras4B(G12V) stimulate vacuolation, but activated forms of Cdc42 and RhoA do not. Amino acid substitutions in the Ras effector domain, which are known to selectively impair its interactions with Raf kinase, class-I phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), or Ral nucleotide exchange factors, initially pointed to Raf as a possible mediator of cell vacuolation. However, the MEK inhibitor, PD98059, did not block the induction of vacuoles, and constitutively active Raf-Caax did not mimic the effects of Ras(G12V). Introduction of normal PTEN together with H-Ras(G12V) into U251 glioblastoma cells reduced the PI3K-dependent activation of Akt, but had no effect on vacuolation. Finally, co-expression of H-Ras(G12V) with a dominant-negative form of RalA did not suppress vacuolation. Taken together, the observations indicate that Ras activates non-conventional and perhaps unique effector pathways to induce cytoplasmic vacuolation in glioblastoma cells. Identification of the relevant signaling pathways may uncover specific molecular targets that can be manipulated to activate non-apoptotic cell death in this type of cancer.  相似文献   

11.
Depending on the cellular context, Ras can activate characteristic effectors by mechanisms still poorly understood. Promotion by galectin-1 of Ras activation of Raf-1 but not of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K) is one such mechanism. In this report, we describe a mechanism controlling selectivity of K-Ras4B (K-Ras), the most important Ras oncoprotein. We show that galectin-3 acts as a selective binding partner of activated K-Ras. Galectin-3 co-immunoprecipitated significantly better with K-Ras-GTP than with K-Ras-GDP, H-Ras, or N-Ras and colocalized with green fluorescent protein-K-Ras(G12V), not with green fluorescent protein-H-Ras(G12V), in the cell membrane. Co-transfectants of K-Ras/galectin-3, but not of H-Ras/galectin-3, exhibited enhanced and prolonged epidermal growth factor-stimulated increases in Ras-GTP, Raf-1 activity, and PI3-K activity. Extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activity, however, was attenuated in K-Ras/galectin-3 and in K-Ras(G12V)/galectin-3 co-transfectants. Galectin-3 antisense RNA inhibited the epidermal growth factor-stimulated increase in K-Ras-GTP but enhanced ERK activation and augmented K-Ras(G12V) transformation activity. Thus, unlike galectin-1, which prolongs Ras activation of ERK and inhibits PI3-K, K-Ras-GTP/galectin-3 interactions promote, in addition to PI3-K and Raf-1 activation, a third inhibitory signal that attenuates active ERK. These experiments established a novel and specific mechanism controlling the duration and selectivity of signals of active K-Ras, which is extremely important in many human tumors.  相似文献   

12.
Activating mutations in the K-ras gene are genetic alterations frequently found in human carcinomas, particularly in pancreatic adenocarcinomas. Mutation of the K-ras gene is thought to be an early and important event in pancreatic tumor initiation, but the precise role of the mutant K-Ras proteins in neoplastic progression is still unknown. In the present study, we have characterized the influence of oncogenic K-Ras on the phenotype and on the signal transduction of epitheloid PANC-1 pancreatic carcinoma cells by generating PANC-1 cell clones, which stably express EGFP(enhanced green fluorescent protein)-K-Ras (V12). EGFP-K-Ras (V12)-expressing cells exhibited a more fibroblastoid cellular phenotype with irregular cell shape and disorganized cytokeratin filaments. Moreover, these cells showed a marked enhancement of their migratory and invasive properties. Stable expression of EGFP-K-Ras (V12) down-regulated the activity of Rac1 and RhoA, resulting in reduced subcortical actin filaments and stress fibers, which might contribute to the epithelial dedifferentiation. Characterization of the activity of mitogen-activated protein kinases revealed that EGFP-K-Ras (V12) enhanced the activity of p38, but did not affect the activities of the Raf/MEK/ERK cascade and JNK. While inhibition of either MEK or JNK activity had no effect on EGFP-K-Ras (V12)-induced migration, inhibition of p38 activity markedly reduced EGFP-K-Ras (V12)-induced migration. Collectively, the results suggest that oncogenic K-Ras enhances the malignant phenotype and identify the mitogen-activated protein kinase p38 as a target to inhibit oncogenic K-Ras-induced pancreatic tumor cell migration.  相似文献   

13.
K-Ras4B belongs to a family of small GTPases that regulates cell growth, differentiation and survival. K-ras is frequently mutated in cancer. K-Ras4B association with the plasma membrane through its farnesylated and positively charged C-terminal hypervariable region (HVR) is critical to its oncogenic function. However, the structural mechanisms of membrane association are not fully understood. Here, using confocal microscopy, surface plasmon resonance, and molecular dynamics simulations, we observed that K-Ras4B can be distributed in rigid and loosely packed membrane domains. Its membrane binding domain interaction with phospholipids is driven by membrane fluidity. The farnesyl group spontaneously inserts into the disordered lipid microdomains, whereas the rigid microdomains restrict the farnesyl group penetration. We speculate that the resulting farnesyl protrusion toward the cell interior allows oligomerization of the K-Ras4B membrane binding domain in rigid microdomains. Unlike other Ras isoforms, K-Ras4B HVR contains a single farnesyl modification and positively charged polylysine sequence. The high positive charge not only modulates specific HVR binding to anionic phospholipids but farnesyl membrane orientation. Phosphorylation of Ser-181 prohibits spontaneous farnesyl membrane insertion. The mechanism illuminates the roles of HVR modifications in K-Ras4B targeting microdomains of the plasma membrane and suggests an additional function for HVR in regulation of Ras signaling.  相似文献   

14.
Ras proteins are small GTPases which regulate cellular proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Constitutively active mutant Ras are expressed in ~15–20% human cancers, and K-Ras mutations account for ~85% of all Ras mutations. Despite the significance of Ras proteins in refractory cancers, there is no anti-Ras drug available in clinic. Since K-Ras must interact with the plasma membrane (PM) for biological activity, inhibition of the K-Ras/PM interaction is a tractable approach to block oncogenic K-Ras activity. Here, we discovered chalcones 1 and 8 exhibit anti-K-Ras activity, and show that the compounds mislocalize K-Ras from the PM and block oncogenic K-Ras signal output. Also, 1 inhibits the growth of K-Ras-driven human cancer cells. Our data suggest that 1 could be a promising starting point for developing anti-K-Ras cancer drug.  相似文献   

15.
Ras proteins must be localized to the inner surface of the plasma membrane to be biologically active. The motifs that effect Ras plasma membrane targeting consist of a C-terminal CAAX motif plus a second signal comprising palmitoylation of adjacent cysteine residues or the presence of a polybasic domain. In this study, we examined how Ras proteins access the cell surface after processing of the CAAX motif is completed in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We show that palmitoylated CAAX proteins, in addition to being localized at the plasma membrane, are found throughout the exocytic pathway and accumulate in the Golgi region when cells are incubated at 15 degrees C. In contrast, polybasic CAAX proteins are found only at the cell surface and not in the exocytic pathway. CAAX proteins which lack a second signal for plasma membrane targeting accumulate in the ER and Golgi. Brefeldin A (BFA) significantly inhibits the plasma membrane accumulation of newly synthesized, palmitoylated CAAX proteins without inhibiting their palmitoylation. BFA has no effect on the trafficking of polybasic CAAX proteins. We conclude that H-ras and K-ras traffic to the cell surface through different routes and that the polybasic domain is a sorting signal diverting K-Ras out of the classical exocytic pathway proximal to the Golgi. Farnesylated Ras proteins that lack a polybasic domain reach the Golgi but require palmitoylation in order to traffic further to the cell surface. These data also indicate that a Ras palmitoyltransferase is present in an early compartment of the exocytic pathway.  相似文献   

16.
After isoprenylation and endoproteolytic processing, the Ras proteins are methylated at the carboxyl-terminal isoprenylcysteine. The importance of isoprenylation for targeting of Ras proteins to the plasma membrane is well established, but the importance of carboxyl methylation, which is carried out by isoprenylcysteine carboxyl methyltransferase (Icmt), is less certain. We used gene targeting to produce homozygous Icmt knockout embryonic stem cells (Icmt-/-). Lysates from Icmt-/- cells lacked the ability to methylate farnesyl-K-Ras4B or small-molecule Icmt substrates such as N-acetyl-S-geranylgeranyl-L-cysteine. To assess the impact of absent Icmt activity on the localization of K-Ras within cells, wild-type and Icmt-/- cells were transfected with a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-K-Ras fusion construct. As expected, virtually all of the GFP-K-Ras fusion in wild-type cells was localized along the plasma membrane. In contrast, a large fraction of the fusion in Icmt-/- cells was trapped within the cytoplasm, and fluorescence at the plasma membrane was reduced. Also, cell fractionation/Western blot studies revealed that a smaller fraction of the K-Ras in Icmt-/- cells was associated with the membranes. We conclude that carboxyl methylation of the isoprenylcysteine is important for proper K-Ras localization in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

17.
The retinoid-inducible gene 1 (RIG1) protein is a retinoid-inducible growth regulator. Previous studies have shown that the RIG1 protein inhibits the signaling pathways of Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinases. However, neither the mode of action nor the site of inhibition of RIG1 is known. This study investigated the effects of RIG1, and the mechanisms responsible for these effects, on the activation of Ras proteins in HtTA cervical cancer cells. RIG1 reduced the levels of activated Ras (Ras-GTP) and total Ras protein in cells transfected with mutated H-, N-, or K-Ras(G12V), or in cells transfected with the wild type H- or N-Ras followed by stimulation with epidermal growth factor. The half-life of Ras protein decreased from more than 36 h in control cells to 18 h in RIG1-transfected cells. RIG1 immunoprecipitated with the Ras protein in co-transfected cellular lysates. In contrast to the predominant plasma membrane localization in control cells, the H-Ras fusion protein EGFP-H-Ras was localized within a discrete cytoplasmic compartment where it co-localized with RIG1. RIG1 inhibited more than 93% of the Elk- and CHOP-mediated transactivation induced by H- or K-Ras(G12V). However, RIG1 did not inhibit the transactivation induced by MEK1 or MEK3, and failed to suppress the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 induced by the constitutively activated B-Raf(V599E). The RIG1 with carboxyl terminal truncation (RIG1DeltaC) did not immunoprecipitate with Ras and had no effect on Ras activation or transactivation of the downstream signal pathways. These data indicate that RIG1 exerts its inhibitory effect at the level of Ras activation, which is independent of Ras subtype but dependent on the membrane localization of the RIG1 protein. This inhibition of Ras activation may be mediated through downregulation of Ras levels and alteration of Ras subcellular distribution.  相似文献   

18.
Ras signaling to its downstream effectors appears to include combinations of extracellular-signal-regulated Ras activation at the plasma membrane (PM) and endomembranes, dynamic lateral segregation in the PM, and translocation of Ras from the PM to intracellular compartments. These processes are governed by the C-terminal polybasic farnesyl domain in K-Ras 4B and by the cysteine-palmitoylated C-terminal farnesyl domains in H-Ras and N-Ras. K-Ras 4B has no palmitoylated cysteines. Depalmitoylation/repalmitoylation of H-/N-Ras proteins promotes their cellular redistribution and signaling by mechanisms as yet unknown, possibly involving chaperones. Palmitoylation of H-/N-Ras also promotes their association with 'rasosomes', randomly diffusing nanoparticles that apparently provide a means by which multiple copies of activated Ras and its signal can spread rapidly. Ubiquitination of H-Ras evidently targets it to the endosomes. The polybasic farnesyl domain of K-Ras 4B was shown to act as a target for Ca++/calmodulin, which sequesters the active protein from the PM, thereby facilitating its trafficking to Golgi apparatus and early endosomes. Protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of S181 in K-Ras 4B was shown to provide a regulated farnesyl-electrostatic switch on K-Ras 4B, which promotes its translocation to the mitochondria. All these translocation events are characterized by nonconventional trafficking of the farnesyl-modified Ras proteins and seem to govern the selectivity and probably also the robustness of the Ras signal. In this review, we discuss the various modifications and interactions of the farnesylated C-terminus, the trafficking of Ras proteins in the PM and between the PM and the endomembranes, and the relevance of the subcellular localization of Ras for Ras function.  相似文献   

19.
Ras converting enzyme 1 (Rce1) is an endoprotease that catalyzes processing of the C-terminus of Ras protein by removing -aaX from the CaaX motif. The activity of Rce1 is crucial for proper localization of Ras to the plasma membrane where it functions. Ras is responsible for transmitting signals related to cell proliferation, cell cycle progression, and apoptosis. The disregulation of these pathways due to constitutively active oncogenic Ras can ultimately lead to cancer. Ras, its effectors and regulators, and the enzymes that are involved in its maturation process are all targets for anti-cancer therapeutics. Key enzymes required for Ras maturation and localization are the farnesyltransferase (FTase), Rce1, and isoprenylcysteine carboxyl methyltransferase (ICMT). Among these proteins, the physiological role of Rce1 in regulating Ras and other CaaX proteins has not been fully explored. Small-molecule inhibitors of Rce1 could be useful as chemical biology tools to understand further the downstream impact of Rce1 on Ras function and serve as potential leads for cancer therapeutics. Structure–activity relationship (SAR) analysis of a previously reported Rce1 inhibitor, NSC1011, has been performed to generate a new library of Rce1 inhibitors. The new inhibitors caused a reduction in Rce1 in vitro activity, exhibited low cell toxicity, and induced mislocalization of EGFP-Ras from the plasma membrane in human colon carcinoma cells giving rise to a phenotype similar to that observed with siRNA knockdowns of Rce1 expression. Several of the new inhibitors were more effective at mislocalizing K-Ras compared to a potent farnesyltransferase inhibitor (FTI), which is significant because of the preponderance of K-Ras mutations in cancer.  相似文献   

20.
It is generally accepted that the cytosolic face of the plasma membrane of mammalian cells is enriched in acidic phospholipids due to an asymmetric distribution of neutral and anionic phospholipids in the two bilayer leaflets. However, the phospholipid asymmetry across intracellular membranes is not known. Two models have been proposed for the selective targeting of K-Ras4B, which contains a C-terminal farnesyl cysteine methyl ester adjacent to a polybasic peptide segment, to the cytosolic face of the plasma membrane. One involves electrostatic interaction of the lipidated polybasic domain with anionic phospholipids in the plasma membrane, and the other involves binding of K-Ras4B to a specific protein receptor. To address this issue, we prepared by semi-synthesis a green fluorescent protein variant that is linked to a farnesylated, polybasic peptide corresponding to the K-Ras4B C terminus as well as a variant that contains an all-d amino acid version of the K-Ras4B peptide. As expected based on electrostatics, both constructs showed preferential in vitro binding to anionic phospholipid vesicles versus those composed only of zwitterionic phospholipid. Both constructs fully targeted to the plasma membrane when microinjected into live Chinese hamster ovary and Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Because the all-d amino acid peptide should be devoid of binding affinity to a putative highly specific K-Ras membrane receptor, these results support an electrostatic basis for the targeting of K-Ras4B to the plasma membrane, and they support an intracellular landscape of phospholipids in which the cytosolic face of the plasma membrane is the most enriched in acidic phospholipids.  相似文献   

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