Abstract

Ral Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Stimulator Like 1 (RGL1) is a RAS effector protein that activates Ral GTPase by stimulating nucleotide exchange. Most structures of RAS-effector complexes are for the HRAS isoform; relatively few KRAS-effector structures have been solved, even though KRAS mutations are more frequent in human cancers. We determined crystal structures of KRAS/RGL1-RAS-association (RA) domain complexes and characterized the interaction in solution using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, size-exclusion chromatography combined with multi-angle light scattering and biolayer interferometry. We report structures of wild-type KRAS and the oncogenic G12V mutant in complex with the RA domain of RGL1 at < 2 Å resolution. KRASWT/RGL1-RA crystallized as a 1:1 heterodimer, whilst KRASG12V/RGL1-RA crystallized as a heterotetrameric structure in which RGL1-RA dimerized via domain-swapping the C-terminal beta-strand. Solution data indicated that KRASWT and KRASG12V in complex with RGL1-RA both exist predominantly as 1:1 dimers, while tetramerization occurs through very slow association. Through detailed structural analyses, the distance and angle between RAS α1 helix and RBD/RA α1 helix were found to differ significantly among RAS and RBD/RA complexes. The KRAS/RGL1-RA structures possess some of the largest α1RAS/α1Effector distances (21.7–22.2 Å), whereas the corresponding distances in previously reported RAS/RAF complexes are significantly shorter (15.2–17.7 Å). Contact map analysis identified unique structural signatures involving contacts between the β1-β2 loop of RA and the α1 helix of RAS, clearly distinguishing the KRAS/RGL1-RA (and other RAS/RA complexes) from RAS/RBD complexes. These results demonstrate that RAS effectors employ an assortment of finely-tuned docking surfaces to achieve optimal interactions with RAS.

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