| Literature DB >> 2116014 |
J Downward1, R Riehl, L Wu, R A Weinberg.
Abstract
The biological activity of proteins encoded by the ras family of oncogenes is dependent on whether they are bound to GTP or GDP: the type of nucleotide bound is dependent on the rate of GTP hydrolysis (promoted by the GTPase-activating protein, GAP) and the rate of nucleotide exchange with cytosolic pools. A protein that stimulates the rate of exchange of guanine nucleotide on p21ras has been identified and characterized in cytoplasmic extracts of human placenta. The exchange-promoting protein runs on a gel filtration column with an apparent relative molecular weight of about 60,000. It is sensitive to heat and to trypsin. The exchange-promoting protein acts reversibly and does not cause degradation of p21ras. It is inactive towards the alpha subunit of a heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein (Go alpha) but acts on a large number of different mutant ras proteins, including transforming and effector mutants that are insensitive to the action of GAP. This protein, which we have termed REP (ras exchange-promoting), has the characteristics expected of a physiological activator of p21ras in cellular growth-signal-transduction pathways.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2116014 PMCID: PMC54457 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.87.15.5998
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205