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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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Incorporation of the available data on rac in neutrophils, CDC42 in yeast, and rho in fibroblasts suggests a general model for the function of rho-like GTPase (Figure 1). Conversion of an inactive cytoplasmic rho-related p21GDP/GDI complex to active p21. GTP occurs by inhibition of GAP and/or stimulation of exchange factors in response to cell signals. p21.GTP is then able to interact with its target at the plasma membrane. This could result in a conformational change in the target, enabling it to bind cytosolic protein(s). Alternatively, p21.GTP could be actively involved in transporting cytosolic protein(s) to the target. A GAP protein, perhaps intrinsic to the complex, would stimulate GTP hydrolysis allowing p21.GDP to dissociate. Solubilization of p21GDP by interaction with GDI would complete a cycle. What about the nature of the final complex? The rac-regulated NADPH oxidase complex in neutrophils is currently the best understood and most amenable to further biochemical analysis. Two plasma-membrane bound subunits encode the catalytic function necessary for producing superoxide, but the two cytosolic proteins, p47 and p67, are essential for activity. Why the complexity? Production of superoxide is tightly coordinated with phagocytosis, a membrane process driven by rearrangement of cortical actin. This is not unrelated to the membrane ruffling and macropinocytosis that we observe in fibroblasts microinjected with p21rac. It is tempting to speculate, therefore, that in neutrophils rac is involved not only in promoting the assembly of the NADPH oxidase but also in the coordinate reorganization of cortical actin leading to phagocytosis. For CDC42 controlled bud assembly in yeast, the components of the plasma-membrane complex are not so clear. By analogy with rac in neutrophils, it seems likely that CDC42 is involved in promoting the assembly of cytosolic components at the bud site on the plasma membrane. These putative cytosolic proteins have not yet been identified, but BEM1 and ABP1 are two possible candidates. The biochemical basis for the stimulation of adhesion plaques and actin stress fibers by p21rho in fibroblasts is also unclear. However, components of the adhesion plaque such as vinculin and talin are known to be cytosolic when not complexed with integrin receptors, and rho could be involved in regulating their assembly into the adhesion plaque. Several things are still difficult to incorporate into this model. First the target for CDC42, the bud site, although not yet structurally defined requires the activity of another small GTPase, BUD1. Similarly, in activated neutrophils, the NADPH oxidase is found in a complex with rap1, the mammalian homologue of BUD1 (BoKoch et al., 1989). It seems likely, therefore, that the target is not simply a plasma-membrane protein but may be a complex of proteins whose formation is under the control of the rap1/BUD1 GTPase. The other black box in this model is the actin connection: activation of bud assembly by CDC42 is followed by actin polymerization, activation of NADPH oxidase in neutrophils occurs concomitantly with phagocytosis, a cortical actin-dependent process, and p21rho in fibroblasts couples the formation of adhesion plaques to actin stress fibers. One possible link between the GTPase-driven assembly of a plasma-membrane complex and actin polymerization could involve the SH3 domain. Interestingly, both p47 and p67 and yeast ABP1 and BEM1 have SH3 domain. If rho-like GTPases recognize plasma-membrane targets already associated with cortical actin, then this could promote an interaction with a subset of SH3-containing proteins. The result of this would be a GTPase-regulated aggregation of a group of proteins at a single site in the plasma membrane. It is not too difficult to imagine biological processes where such a spatial integration of different biochemical activities would be essential: coupling the assembly of bud components to the formation of actin fibers in yeast; or the activation of NADPH oxidase to phagocytosis in neutrophils; or the assembly of adhesion plaques and the formation of actin stress fibers in fibroblasts are just three examples that have emerged so far. In conclusion, although rho-like GTPases clearly have distinct roles in different mammalian cell types and in yeast, their underlying mechanism of action appears to be strikingly similar. Whether this will remain so when there are some biochemical data to back up these initial observations, time will tell.
Mol Biol Cell 1992 May
PMID:Ras-related GTPases and the cytoskeleton. 161 Nov 53

Cellular transition from the resting state to DNA synthesis involves master switches genes encoding transcriptional factors (e.g., fos, jun, and egr genes), whose targets remain to be fully characterized. To isolate coding sequences specifically accumulated in late G1, a differential screening was performed on a cDNA library prepared from hamster lung fibroblasts stimulated for 5 h with serum. One of the positive clones which displayed a sevenfold induction, turned out to code for a protein sharing homology to Ras-like products. Cloning and sequence analysis of the human homolog revealed that this putative new small GTPase, referred to as rhoG, is more closely related to the rac, CDC42, and TC10 members of the rho (ras homolog) gene family and might have diverged very early during evolution. rhoG mRNA accumulates in proportion to the mitogenic strength of various purified growth factors used for the stimulation, as a consequence of transcriptional activation. G1-specific RNA accumulation is impaired upon addition of antimitogenic cyclic AMP and is enhanced when protein synthesis is inhibited, mainly as a result of RNA stabilization. rhoG mRNA expression is observed in a wide variety of human organs but reaches a particularly high level in lung and placental tissues.
Mol Cell Biol 1992 Jul
PMID:Growth-regulated expression of rhoG, a new member of the ras homolog gene family. 162 Jan 21

We have isolated two cDNAs encoding small GTP-binding proteins from leaf cDNA libraries. These cDNAs encode distinct proteins which show considerable homology to members of the ras superfamily. Np-ypt3, a 1044 bp long Nicotiana plumbaginifolia cDNA, encodes a 24.4 kDa protein which shows 65% amino acid sequence similarity to the Schizosaccharomyces pombe ypt3 protein. The N-ypt3 gene is differentially expressed in mature flowering plants. Expression of this gene is weak in leaves, higher in stems and roots, but highest in petals, stigmas and stamens. Nt-rab5, a 712 bp long Nicotiana tabacum SR1 cDNA, encodes a 21.9 kDa protein which displays 65% amino acid sequence similarity to mammalian rab5 proteins. The expression pattern of the Nt-rab5 gene is very similar to that of the Np-ypt3 gene. The Nt-rab5 gene is virtually not expressed in leaves, higher in stems and roots, and highest in flowers. Both the Nt-rab5 and Np-ypt3 proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli and shown to bind GTP.
Plant Mol Biol 1992 Aug
PMID:Molecular characterization of tobacco cDNAs encoding two small GTP-binding proteins. 164 85

One of the major activities of developing neurons is the transport of new membrane to the growing axon. Candidates for playing a key role in the regulation of this intense traffic are the small GTP-binding proteins of the rab family. We have used hippocampal neurons in culture and analyzed membrane traffic activity after suppressing the expression of the small GTP-binding protein rab8. Inhibition of protein expression was accomplished by using sequence-specific antisense oligonucleotides. While rab8 depletion resulted in the blockage of morphological maturation in 95% of the neurons, suppression of expression of another rab protein, rab3a, had no effect, and all neurons developed normal axons and dendrites. The impairment of neuronal maturation by rab8 antisense treatment was due to inhibition of membrane traffic. Thus, by using video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy, we observed in the rab8-depleted cells a dramatic reduction in the number of vesicles undergoing anterograde transport. Moreover, by incubating antisense-treated neurons with Bodipy-labeled ceramide, a fluorescent marker for newly formed exocytic vesicles, we observed fluorescence labeling restricted to the Golgi apparatus, whereas in control cells labeling was found also in the neurites. These results show the role of the small GTPase rab8 in membrane traffic during neuronal process outgrowth.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Feb
PMID:A deficiency of the small GTPase rab8 inhibits membrane traffic in developing neurons. 782 56

From nodule and seedling cDNA libraries we isolated cDNA copies of two mRNAs, derived from the genes gmr1 and gmr2, encoding members of the Ypt/Rab family of small GTP-binding proteins. Two deduced protein products, GMR1 and GMR2, were found to be nearly identical differing by only four amino acids in the analysed parts. The two putative proteins are 79% identical to the previously described ARA small GTPase from Arabidopsis thaliana. The GMR proteins may thus be the counterpart of the ARA protein and may perform a related biological function in Glycine max. The gmr2 genomic sequence was isolated and structurally analysed. Expression analyses by northern and cDNA-based PCR showed that the gmr1 and gmr2 genes are constitutively expressed in different plant organs, although at a slightly higher level in callus culture. The classification of the gmr sequences as relatives of the Ypt/Rab family suggests that the deduced GMR proteins are involved in control of processes related to vesicle trafficking in plant cells.
Plant Mol Biol 1994 Oct
PMID:Molecular analysis of two Ypt/Rab-related sequences isolated from soybean (Glycine max) DNA libraries. 794 68

The ypt/rab proteins are a family of small GTP-binding proteins thought to be required for different stages of membrane traffic. From the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe we have isolated and characterized ypt5, a gene encoding a homologue of rab5, a mammalian protein apparently involved in regulating fusion of early endosomes. Recombinant ypt5 protein bound GTP. The ypt5 gene was found to be essential for viability on minimal media, but ypt5-disrupted cells grew slowly on some rich media and accumulated a population of small vesicles not observed in wild-type cells. Canine rab5 cDNA could replace the ypt5 gene in S. pombe and restore normal growth and viability. Ypt5 protein expressed in mammalian cells colocalized with the transferrin receptor to early endosomes. Thus, molecular aspects of the early endocytic pathway may be conserved between mammalian cells and S. pombe and hence may be amenable to genetic analysis.
Mol Biol Cell 1993 Jun
PMID:Schizosaccharomyces pombe ypt5: a homologue of the rab5 endosome fusion regulator. 837 69

G proteins are molecular switches that use a cycle of GTP binding and hydrolysis to regulate a wide variety of cellular biochemical processes. Because the functional state of these proteins is allosterically determined by bound guanine nucleotides, a nucleotide analogue with protein specificity might have pharmacological or biochemical value. The binding of [alpha-32P]GTP to four small G proteins immobilized on nitrocellulose was competed by a series of analogues with modifications at multiple sites. One analogue, N2-(p-n-butylphenyl)guanosine 5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate, had a approximately 40-fold higher affinity for one small G protein than for two of the others. Systematic analysis of each modification in the synthetic nucleotide revealed that specificity was conferred by the carbon substitution in the beta,gamma-phosphoanhydride bond. These observations were then extended to purified proteins of known sequence in solution by filtration binding studies with H-ras and rab5. Ras was 9-fold more discriminant between guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate and guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) than was rab5, and the Q79L GTPase-defective mutant of rab5 was 6-fold more discriminant than wild-type rab5. Guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-difluoromethylene)triphosphate protected a 20-kDa fragment of rab5 from tryptic proteolysis with greater efficacy than guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) or guanosine-5'-(beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate despite its lower affinity, and GMP stabilized a conformation indistinguishable from apo-rab5. These results identify a synthetic guanine nucleotide analogue with differential affinity for closely related G proteins, determine the atomic substitution in the analogue that confers specificity, demonstrate discrimination by the analogue between wild-type and a point-mutant G protein, and establish efficacy of the analogue in inducing conformational change of a target protein disproportionate to the affinity of the interaction.
Mol Pharmacol 1996 Jan
PMID:Specific and effective interaction of a guanine nucleotide analogue with small G proteins. 856 2

Rab3A is a small GTPase implicated in the docking of secretory vesicles in neuroendocrine cells. A putative downstream target for Rab3A, rabphilin-3A, is located exclusively on secretory vesicle membranes. It contains near its C terminus two C2 domains that bind Ca2+ in a phospholipid-dependent manner and an N-terminal, Rab3A-binding domain that includes a Cys-rich region. We have determined that the Cys-rich domain binds two Zn2+ ions and is necessary but not sufficient for efficient binding of rabphilin to Rab3A. A minimal Rab3A-binding domain consists of residues 45 to 170 of rabphilin. HA1-tagged Rab3A and a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-rabphilin fusion were used to examine the roles of Rab3A and of rabphilin domains in the subcellular localization of these proteins. A Rab3A mutant (T54A) that does not bind rabphifin in vitro colocalized with the GFP-rabphilin fusion, indicating that Rab3A targeting is independent of its interaction with rabphilin. Deletion of the C2 domains of rabphilin reduced membrane association of GFP-rabphilin but did not cause mistargeting of the membrane-associated fraction. However, disruption of the zinc fingers, which drastically reduced Rab3A binding, did not reduce membrane association. These results suggest that the C2 domains are required for efficient membrane attachment of rabphilin in PC12 cells and that Rab3A binding may act to target the protein to the correct membrane.
Mol Cell Biol 1996 Sep
PMID:Role of the Rab3A-binding domain in targeting of rabphilin-3A to vesicle membranes of PC12 cells. 875 57

Ran is a small GTPase that is required for protein import, mRNA export, and the maintenance of nuclear structures. To gain a better understanding of Ran's role in the nucleus, we have sought to use Xenopus egg extracts for the purification and characterization of proteins from egg extracts bound with a high affinity to a glutathione-S-transferase-Ran fusion protein (GST-Ran). We found that GST-Ran associates specifically with at least 10 extract proteins. We determined the identifies of six Ran-interacting proteins (Rips), and found that they include RanBP2/Nup358, Nup153, Importin beta, hsc70, RCC1, and RanBP1. On the basis of peptide sequence, a seventh Rip (p88) seems to be similar but not identical to Fug1/RanGAP1, the mammalian Ran-GTPase-activating protein. Gel filtration analysis of endogenous extract proteins suggests that Importin beta acts as a primary GTP-Ran effector. Both Ran and Importin beta are coimmunoprecipitated by anti-p340RanBP2 antibodies in the presence of nonhydrolyzable GTP analogues, suggesting that Ran-Importin beta complexes interact with p340RanBP2. Two other Rips, p18 and p88, are coprecipitated with p340RanBP2 in a nucleotide-independent manner. Analysis of the Ran-GTPase pathway in Xenopus extracts allows the examination of interactions between Ran-associated proteins under conditions that resemble in vivo conditions more closely than in assays with purified components, and it thereby allows additional insights into the molecular mechanism of nuclear transport.
Mol Biol Cell 1996 Sep
PMID:Direct and indirect association of the small GTPase ran with nuclear pore proteins and soluble transport factors: studies in Xenopus laevis egg extracts. 888 29

A role for Rab4 in the translocation of the glucose transporter Glut4 induced by insulin has been recently proposed. To study more directly the role of this small GTPase, freshly isolated adipocytes were transiently transfected with the cDNAs of both an epitope-tagged Glut4-myc and Rab4, a system which allows direct measurement of the concentration of Glut4 molecules at the cell surface. When cells were cotransfected with Glut4-myc and Rab4, the concentration of Glut4-myc at the cell surface decreased in parallel with the increased expression of Rab4, suggesting that Rab4 participates in the intracellular retention of Glut4. In parallel, the amount of Rab4 associated with the Glut4-containing vesicles increased. When Rab4 was moderately overexpressed, the number of Glut4-myc molecules recruited to the cell surface in response to insulin was similar to that observed in mock-transfected cells, and thus the insulin efficiency was increased. When Rab4 was expressed at a higher level, the amount of Glut4-myc present at the cell surface in response to insulin decreased. Since the overexpressed protein was predominantly cytosolic, this suggests that the cytosolic Rab4 might complex some factor(s) necessary for insulin action. This hypothesis was strengthened by the fact that Rab4 deltaCT, a Rab4 mutant lacking the geranylgeranylation sites, inhibited insulin-induced recruitement of Glut4-myc to the cell surface, even when moderately overexpressed. Rab3D was without effect on Glut4-myc subcellular distribution in basal or insulin-stimulated conditions. While two mutated proteins unable to bind GTP did not decrease the number of Glut4-myc molecules in basal or insulin-stimulated conditions at the plasma membrane, the behavior of a mutated Rab4 protein without GTPase activity was similar to that of the wild-type Rab4 protein, indicating that GTP binding but not its hydrolysis was required for the observed effects. Altogether, our results suggest that Rab4, but not Rab3D, participates in the molecular mechanism involved in the subcellular distribution of the Glut4 molecules both in basal and in insulin-stimulated conditions in adipocytes.
Mol Cell Biol 1996 Dec
PMID:Potential role of Rab4 in the regulation of subcellular localization of Glut4 in adipocytes. 894 43


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