Abstract

Ras genes potently drive human cancers, with mutated proto-oncogene GTPase KRAS4B (K-Ras4B) being the most abundant isoform. Targeted inhibition of oncogenic gene products is considered the "holy grail" of present-day cancer therapy, and recent discoveries of small-molecule KRas4B inhibitors were made thanks to a deeper understanding of the structure and dynamics of this GTPase. Because interactions with biological membranes are key for Ras function, Ras-lipid interactions have become a major focus, especially because such interactions evidently involve both the Ras C terminus for lipid anchoring and its G-protein domain. Here, using NMR spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations complemented by biophysical- and cell-biology assays, we investigated the interaction between K-Ras4B with the signaling lipid phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-phosphate (PIP2). We discovered that the β2 and β3 strands as well as helices 4 and 5 of the GTPase G-domain bind to PIP2 and identified the specific residues in these structural elements employed in these interactions, likely occurring in two K-Ras4B orientation states relative to the membrane. Importantly, we found that some of these residues known to be oncogenic when mutated (D47K, D92N, K104M, and D126N) are critical for K-Ras-mediated transformation of fibroblast cells, but do not substantially affect basal and assisted nucleotide hydrolysis and exchange. Moreover, the K104M substitution abolished localization of K-Ras to the plasma membrane. The findings suggest that specific G-domain residues can critically regulate Ras function by mediating interactions with membrane-associated PIP2 lipids; these insights that may inform the future design of therapeutic reagents targeting Ras activity.

Highlights

  • Ras genes potently drive human cancers, with mutated protooncogene GTPase KRAS4B (K-Ras4B) being the most abundant isoform

  • Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations complemented by biophysicaland cell-biology assays, we investigated the interaction between K-Ras4B with the signaling lipid phosphatidylinositol [4,5]phosphate (PIP2)

  • The G-domain includes the N-terminal residues 1–166, which associate with GTPase exchange factors (GEFs), and GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) [8]

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Summary

Results

Full-length as well as HVR-truncated K-Ras4B binds to PIP2 and other specific lipids. The extent of intensity change is diminished compared with the full-length K-Ras, consistent with the other experiments above, which showed that binding is more transient for HVR-truncated K-Ras. the perturbed residues are much less spread out in the protein sequence, possibly because the HVR– lipid interaction creates longer range effects in the fulllength protein. The K104M mutation completely disrupted plasma membrane localization, indicating that this residue is critical in lipid binding or for another process involving intracellular localization of K-Ras4B This provided a direct explanation for the inactivity of this construct in the transformation assays (Fig. 8). Changes of K-Ras4B orientation on the membrane rendered K-Ras4B unable to bind certain downstream regulators, subsequently diminishing the transformation activity

Discussion
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