eLife (Jan 2020)

Membrane interactions of the globular domain and the hypervariable region of KRAS4b define its unique diffusion behavior

  • Debanjan Goswami,
  • De Chen,
  • Yue Yang,
  • Prabhakar R Gudla,
  • John Columbus,
  • Karen Worthy,
  • Megan Rigby,
  • Madeline Wheeler,
  • Suman Mukhopadhyay,
  • Katie Powell,
  • William Burgan,
  • Vanessa Wall,
  • Dominic Esposito,
  • Dhirendra K Simanshu,
  • Felice C Lightstone,
  • Dwight V Nissley,
  • Frank McCormick,
  • Thomas Turbyville

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.47654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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The RAS proteins are GTP-dependent switches that regulate signaling pathways and are frequently mutated in cancer. RAS proteins concentrate in the plasma membrane via lipid-tethers and hypervariable region side-chain interactions in distinct nano-domains. However, little is known about RAS membrane dynamics and the details of RAS activation of downstream signaling. Here, we characterize RAS in live human and mouse cells using single-molecule-tracking methods and estimate RAS mobility parameters. KRAS4b exhibits confined mobility with three diffusive states distinct from the other RAS isoforms (KRAS4a, NRAS, and HRAS); and although most of the amino acid differences between RAS isoforms lie within the hypervariable region, the additional confinement of KRAS4b is largely determined by the protein’s globular domain. To understand the altered mobility of an oncogenic KRAS4b, we used complementary experimental and molecular dynamics simulation approaches to reveal a detailed mechanism.

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