| Literature DB >> 7961691 |
G L James1, M S Brown, M H Cobb, J L Goldstein.
Abstract
A benzodiazepine peptidomimetic, BZA-5B, inhibits farnesylation of H-Ras and normalizes the morphology of Rat-1 cells transformed with H-RasV12 at concentrations that do not affect the growth of untransformed Rat-1 cells. In the current experiments, we show that BZA-5B decreases the active forms of enzymes in the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signaling cascade, including Raf, MAP kinase kinase (MEK), and MAP kinase, in cells transformed with H-RasV12. BZA-5B had no effect on these enzymes in cells transformed with H-RasV12,L189, which is geranylgeranylated rather than farnesylated. In cells transformed with H-RasV12, BZA-5B reduced the activities of enzymes in the MAP kinase pathway at concentrations that only partially blocked farnesylation of H-RasV12, suggesting that nonfarnesylated H-RasV12 is a dominant inhibitor of the action of farnesylated H-RasV12 in the BZA-5B treated cells. In untransformed Rat-1 cells, BZA-5B did not inhibit MAP kinase activity nor did it prevent the acute activation triggered by epidermal growth factor, even though farnesylated endogenous H-Ras was no longer detectable. These data raise the possibility that untransformed cells contain a form of Ras (K-Ras or N-Ras) whose prenylation is not inhibited by BZA-5B, thus allowing them to resist the effects of BZA-5B.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7961691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157