Abstract

The Ras family of small GTPases control diverse signaling pathways through a conserved "switch" mechanism, which is turned on by binding of GTP and turned off by GTP hydrolysis to GDP. Full understanding of GTPase switch functions requires reliable, quantitative assays for nucleotide binding and hydrolysis. Fluorescently labeled guanine nucleotides, such as 2'(3')-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl) (mant)-substituted GTP and GDP analogs, have been widely used to investigate the molecular properties of small GTPases, including Ras and Rho. Using a recently developed NMR method, we show that the kinetics of nucleotide hydrolysis and exchange by three small GTPases, alone and in the presence of their cognate GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) and guanine nucleotide exchange factors, are affected by the presence of the fluorescent mant moiety. Intrinsic hydrolysis of mantGTP by Ras homolog enriched in brain (Rheb) is approximately 10 times faster than that of GTP, whereas it is 3.4 times slower with RhoA. On the other hand, the mant tag inhibits TSC2GAP-catalyzed GTP hydrolysis by Rheb but promotes p120 RasGAP-catalyzed GTP hydrolysis by H-Ras. Guanine nucleotide exchange factor-catalyzed nucleotide exchange for both H-Ras and RhoA was inhibited by mant-substituted nucleotides, and the degree of inhibition depends highly on the GTPase and whether the assay measures association of mantGTP with, or dissociation of mantGDP from the GTPase. These results indicate that the mant moiety has significant and unpredictable effects on GTPase reaction kinetics and underscore the importance of validating its use in each assay.

Highlights

  • The Ras superfamily of small GTPases plays vital roles in the integrated network of cellular signaling

  • We employed this NMR method to compare native versus mant-labeled nucleotides in the kinetics of intrinsic GTPase reactions, GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs)-mediated nucleotide hydrolysis, and GEF-mediated nucleotide exchange reactions of three small GTPases, H-Ras, Ras homolog enriched in brain (Rheb), and RhoA

  • Our results clearly demonstrate that mant-labeled nucleotides had substantial effects on the kinetics of these reactions and that these effects were remarkably different and unpredictable with each GTPase, GAP, and GEF

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Summary

Introduction

The Ras superfamily of small GTPases plays vital roles in the integrated network of cellular signaling. We developed an NMR-based real-time assay to monitor the rate of GTP hydrolysis of Ras homolog enriched in brain (Rheb), enabling us to monitor GTPase reactions using native GTP and GDP (supplemental Fig. S2b) [10].

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