The importance of two conserved arginine residues for catalysis by the Ras GTPase-activating protein, neurofibromin

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Abstract

Ras proteins are guanine-nucleotide binding proteins that have a low intrinsic GTPase activity that is enhanced 105-fold by the GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) p120-GAP and neurofibromin. Comparison of the primary sequences of RasGAPs shows two invariant arginine residues (Arg1276 and Arg1391 of neurofibromin). In this study, site-directed mutagenesis was used to change each of these residues in the catalytic domain of neurofibromin (NF1-334) to alanine. The ability of the mutant proteins to bind to Ras-GTP and to stimulate their intrinsic GTPase rate was then determined by kinetic methods under single turnover conditions using a fluorescent analogue of GTP. The separate contributions of each of these residues to catalysis and binding affinity to Ras were measured. Both the R1276A and the R1391A mutant NF1-334 proteins were 1000-fold less active than wild-type NF1-334 in activating the GTPase when measured at saturating concentrations. In contrast, there was only a minor effect of either mutation on NF1-334 affinity for wild-type Ha-Ras. These data are consistent with both arginines being required for efficient catalysis. Neither arginine is absolutely essential, because the mutant NF1-334 proteins increase the intrinsic Ras-GTPase by at least 100-fold. The roles of Arg1276 and Arg1391 in neurofibromin are consistent with proposals based on the recently published x-ray structure of p120-GAP complexed with Ras.

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Sermon, B. A., Lowe, P. N., Strom, M., & Eccleston, J. F. (1998). The importance of two conserved arginine residues for catalysis by the Ras GTPase-activating protein, neurofibromin. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(16), 9480–9485. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.16.9480

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