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Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling

Oncogenic RAS proteins, involved in ∼30% of human tumors, are molecular switches of various signal transduction pathways. Here we apply a new protocol for the NMR study of KRAS in its (inactive) GDP- and (activated) GTP-bound form, allowing a comprehensive analysis of the backbone dynamics of its WT...

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Autores principales: Menyhárd, Dóra K., Pálfy, Gyula, Orgován, Zoltán, Vida, István, Keserű, György M., Perczel, András
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8161693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34094198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03441j
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author Menyhárd, Dóra K.
Pálfy, Gyula
Orgován, Zoltán
Vida, István
Keserű, György M.
Perczel, András
author_facet Menyhárd, Dóra K.
Pálfy, Gyula
Orgován, Zoltán
Vida, István
Keserű, György M.
Perczel, András
author_sort Menyhárd, Dóra K.
collection PubMed
description Oncogenic RAS proteins, involved in ∼30% of human tumors, are molecular switches of various signal transduction pathways. Here we apply a new protocol for the NMR study of KRAS in its (inactive) GDP- and (activated) GTP-bound form, allowing a comprehensive analysis of the backbone dynamics of its WT-, G12C- and G12D variants. We found that Tyr32 shows opposite mobility with respect to the backbone of its surroundings: it is more flexible in the GDP-bound form while more rigid in GTP-complexes (especially in WT- and G12D-GTP). Using the G12C/Y32F double mutant, we showed that the presence of the hydroxyl group of Tyr32 has a marked effect on the G12C-KRAS-GTP system as well. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that Tyr32 is linked to the γ-phosphate of GTP in the activated states – an arrangement shown, using QM/MM calculations, to support catalysis. Anchoring Tyr32 to the γ-phosphate contributes to the capture of the catalytic waters participating in the intrinsic hydrolysis of GTP and supports a simultaneous triple proton transfer step (catalytic water → assisting water → Tyr32 → O1G of the γ-phosphate) leading to straightforward product formation. The coupled flip of negatively charged residues of switch I toward the inside of the effector binding pocket potentiates ligand recognition, while positioning of Thr35 to enter the coordination sphere of the Mg(2+) widens the pocket. Position 12 mutations do not disturb the capture of Tyr32 by the γ-phosphate, but (partially) displace Gln61, which opens up the catalytic pocket and destabilizes catalytic water molecules thus impairing intrinsic hydrolysis.
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spelling pubmed-81616932021-06-04 Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling Menyhárd, Dóra K. Pálfy, Gyula Orgován, Zoltán Vida, István Keserű, György M. Perczel, András Chem Sci Chemistry Oncogenic RAS proteins, involved in ∼30% of human tumors, are molecular switches of various signal transduction pathways. Here we apply a new protocol for the NMR study of KRAS in its (inactive) GDP- and (activated) GTP-bound form, allowing a comprehensive analysis of the backbone dynamics of its WT-, G12C- and G12D variants. We found that Tyr32 shows opposite mobility with respect to the backbone of its surroundings: it is more flexible in the GDP-bound form while more rigid in GTP-complexes (especially in WT- and G12D-GTP). Using the G12C/Y32F double mutant, we showed that the presence of the hydroxyl group of Tyr32 has a marked effect on the G12C-KRAS-GTP system as well. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that Tyr32 is linked to the γ-phosphate of GTP in the activated states – an arrangement shown, using QM/MM calculations, to support catalysis. Anchoring Tyr32 to the γ-phosphate contributes to the capture of the catalytic waters participating in the intrinsic hydrolysis of GTP and supports a simultaneous triple proton transfer step (catalytic water → assisting water → Tyr32 → O1G of the γ-phosphate) leading to straightforward product formation. The coupled flip of negatively charged residues of switch I toward the inside of the effector binding pocket potentiates ligand recognition, while positioning of Thr35 to enter the coordination sphere of the Mg(2+) widens the pocket. Position 12 mutations do not disturb the capture of Tyr32 by the γ-phosphate, but (partially) displace Gln61, which opens up the catalytic pocket and destabilizes catalytic water molecules thus impairing intrinsic hydrolysis. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8161693/ /pubmed/34094198 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03441j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Menyhárd, Dóra K.
Pálfy, Gyula
Orgován, Zoltán
Vida, István
Keserű, György M.
Perczel, András
Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title_full Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title_fullStr Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title_full_unstemmed Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title_short Structural impact of GTP binding on downstream KRAS signaling
title_sort structural impact of gtp binding on downstream kras signaling
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8161693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34094198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03441j
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