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Molecular and Cellular Biology, December 1998, p. 7444-7454, Vol. 18, No. 12
University of Southern California/Norris
Cancer Center and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles,
California 90033
Received 13 May 1998/Returned for modification 15 June
1998/Accepted 20 August 1998
The Ras-related GTPases are small, 20- to 25-kDa proteins which
cycle between an inactive GDP-bound form and an active GTP-bound state.
The Ras superfamily includes the Ras, Rho, Ran, Arf, and Rab/YPT1
families, each of which controls distinct cellular functions. The
crystal structures of Ras, Rac, Arf, and Ran reveal a nearly superimposible structure surrounding the GTP-binding pocket, and it is
generally presumed that the Rab/YPT1 family shares this core structure.
The Ras, Rac, Ran, Arf, and Rab/YPT1 families are activated by
interaction with family-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factors
(GEFs). The structural determinants of GTPases required for interaction
with family-specific GEFs have begun to emerge. We sought to determine
the sites on YPT1 which interact with GEFs. We found that mutations of
YPT1 at position 42, 43, or 49 (effector loop; switch I), position 69, 71, 73, or 75 (switch II), and position 107, 109, or 115 (alpha-helix
3-loop 7 [
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Distinct Subclasses of Small GTPases Interact with
Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors in a Similar Manner
3-L7]) are intragenic suppressors of dominant
interfering YPT1 mutant N22 (YPT1-N22), suggesting these mutations
prevent YPT1-N22 from binding to and sequestering an endogenous GEF.
Mutations at these positions prevent interaction with the DSS4 GEF in
vitro. Mutations in the switch II and
3-L7 regions do not prevent
downstream signaling in yeast when combined with a GTPase-defective
(activating) mutation. Together, these results show that the YPT1
GTPase interacts with GEFs in a manner reminiscent of that for Ras and
Arf in that these GTPases use divergent sequences corresponding to the
switch I and II regions and
3-L7 of Ras to interact with
family-specific GEFs. This finding suggests that GTPases of the Ras
superfamily each may share common features of GEF-mediated guanine
nucleotide exchange even though the GEFs for each of the Ras
subfamilies appear evolutionarily unrelated.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: 1441 Eastlake Ave., NOR-524, Los Angeles, CA 90033-0800. Phone: (323)
865-0523. Fax: (323) 865-0105. E-mail:
broek{at}zygote.hsc.usc.edu.
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