The Ras-RasGAP Complex: Structural Basis for GTPase Activation and Its Loss in Oncogenic Ras Mutants

Author:

Scheffzek Klaus1,Ahmadian Mohammad Reza1,Kabsch Wolfgang1,Wiesmüller Lisa1,Lautwein Alfred1,Schmitz Frank1,Wittinghofer Alfred1

Affiliation:

1. K. Scheffzek, M. R. Ahmadian, L. Wiesmüller, A. Lautwein, F. Schmitz, and A. Wittinghofer are at the Max-Planck-Institut für molekulare Physiologie, Abteilung Strukturelle Biologie, Rheinlanddamm 201, 44139 Dortmund, Germany. W. Kabsch is at the Max-Planck-Institut für medizinische Forschung, Jahnstrasse 29, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.

Abstract

The three-dimensional structure of the complex between human H-Ras bound to guanosine diphosphate and the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase)–activating domain of the human GTPase-activating protein p120 GAP (GAP-334) in the presence of aluminum fluoride was solved at a resolution of 2.5 angstroms. The structure shows the partly hydrophilic and partly hydrophobic nature of the communication between the two molecules, which explains the sensitivity of the interaction toward both salts and lipids. An arginine side chain (arginine-789) of GAP-334 is supplied into the active site of Ras to neutralize developing charges in the transition state. The switch II region of Ras is stabilized by GAP-334, thus allowing glutamine-61 of Ras, mutation of which activates the oncogenic potential, to participate in catalysis. The structural arrangement in the active site is consistent with a mostly associative mechanism of phosphoryl transfer and provides an explanation for the activation of Ras by glycine-12 and glutamine-61 mutations. Glycine-12 in the transition state mimic is within van der Waals distance of both arginine-789 of GAP-334 and glutamine-61 of Ras, and even its mutation to alanine would disturb the arrangements of residues in the transition state.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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