Literature DB >> 16236799

K-ras4B and prenylated proteins lacking "second signals" associate dynamically with cellular membranes.

John R Silvius1, Pinkesh Bhagatji, Rania Leventis, Donato Terrone.   

Abstract

We have used fluorescence microscopy and the technique of rapamycin-regulated protein heterodimerization to examine the dynamics of the subcellular localizations of fluorescent proteins fused to lipid-modified protein sequences and to wild-type and mutated forms of full-length K-ras4B. Singly prenylated or myristoylated fluorescent protein derivatives lacking a "second signal" to direct them to specific subcellular destinations, but incorporating a rapamycin-dependent heterodimerization module, rapidly translocate to mitochondria upon rapamycin addition to bind to a mitochondrial outer membrane protein incorporating a complementary heterodimerization module. Under the same conditions analogous constructs anchored to the plasma membrane by multiply lipid-modified sequences, or by a transmembrane helix, show very slow or no transfer to mitochondria, respectively. Interestingly, however, fluorescent protein constructs incorporating either full-length K-ras4B or its plasma membrane-targeting sequence alone undergo rapamycin-induced transfer from the plasma membrane to mitochondria on a time scale of minutes, demonstrating the rapidly reversible nature of K-ras4B binding to the plasma membrane. The dynamic nature of the plasma membrane targeting of K-ras4B could contribute to K-ras4B function by facilitating redistribution of the protein between subcellular compartments under particular conditions.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16236799      PMCID: PMC1345658          DOI: 10.1091/mbc.e05-05-0408

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Cell        ISSN: 1059-1524            Impact factor:   4.138


  62 in total

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4.  Phospholipase Cgamma activates Ras on the Golgi apparatus by means of RasGRP1.

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Review 5.  Multiple roles for Arf6: sorting, structuring, and signaling at the plasma membrane.

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  42 in total

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Review 9.  Ras/MAPK signaling from endomembranes.

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Review 10.  Shuttling and translocation of heterotrimeric G proteins and Ras.

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