Abstract

Small guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) become activated when GDP is replaced by GTP at the highly conserved nucleotide binding site. This process is intrinsically very slow in most GTPases but is significantly accelerated by guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs). Nucleotide exchange in small GTPases has been widely studied using spectroscopy with fluorescently tagged nucleotides. However, this method suffers from effects of the bulky fluorescent moiety covalently attached to the nucleotide. Here, we have used a newly developed real-time NMR-based assay to monitor small GTPase RhoA nucleotide exchange by probing the RhoA conformation. We compared RhoA nucleotide exchange from GDP to GTP and GTP analogues in the absence and presence of the catalytic DH-PH domain of PDZ-RhoGEF (DH-PH(PRG)). Using the non-hydrolyzable analogue guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate), which we found to be a reliable mimic of GTP, we obtained an intrinsic nucleotide exchange rate of 5.5 x 10(-4) min(-1). This reaction is markedly accelerated to 1179 x 10(-4) min(-1) in the presence of DH-PH(PRG) at a ratio of 1:8,000 relative to RhoA. Mutagenesis studies confirmed the importance of Arg-868 near a conserved region (CR3) of the Dbl homology (DH) domain and revealed that Glu-741 in CR1 is critical for full activity of DH-PH(PRG), together suggesting that the catalytic mechanism of PDZ-RhoGEF is similar to Tiam1. Mutation of the single RhoA (E97A) residue that contacts the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain rendered the mutant 10-fold less sensitive to the activity of DH-PH(PRG). Interestingly, this mutation does not affect RhoA activation by leukemia-associated RhoGEF (LARG), indicating that the PH domains of these two homologous GEFs may play different roles.

Highlights

  • The pleckstrin homology (PH) domain is comprised of seven antiparallel ␤-strands Dbl homology (DH) domain alone is ϳ41-fold less active than the DH-PH domain topped by a helix containing a partially conserved residue (Ser- of PDZ-RhoGEF [7], but it is less stable; the importance 1065 in PDZ-RhoGEF) that interacts with Glu-97 of RhoA [7]

  • We found that RhoA Glu-97 is required for full activation by DH-PHPRG, suggesting that the PH domain plays an important role in catalysis

  • RhoA Nucleotide Exchange Stimulated with DH-PHPRG—To explore the possibility of using the NMR assay for RhoA nucleotide exchange, we first sought to assign backbone resonances of RhoA

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Summary

Introduction

The DH domain interacts extensively, through CR1 and CR3, with the switch regions of the cognate GTPase as illustrated in the crystal structure of PDZ-RhoGEF (DH-PHPRG) in complex with RhoA (1XCG) [7]. The NMR GTPase assay was extended to monitor intrinsic and PDZ-RhoGEF-mediated RhoA nucleotide exchange using native GDP and GTP as substrates. While investigating PDZ-RhoGEF-mediated RhoA nucleotide exchange reactions using different nucleotides, we discovered that GTP␥S better mimics GTP than the analogues mant-GTP or GMPPNP.

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