Ran's C-terminal, Basic Patch, and Nucleotide Exchange Mechanisms in Light of a Canonical Structure for Rab, Rho, Ras, and Ran GTPases

  1. Andrew F. Neuwald1,3,
  2. Natarajan Kannan1,
  3. Aleksandar Poleksic1,
  4. Naoya Hata1, and
  5. Jun S. Liu2
  1. 1Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724, USA; 2Department of Statistics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA

Abstract

Proteins comprising the core of the eukaryotic cellular machinery are often highly conserved, presumably due to selective constraints maintaining important structural features. We have developed statistical procedures to decompose these constraints into distinct categories and to pinpoint critical structural features within each category. When applied to P-loop GTPases, this revealed within Rab, Rho, Ras, and Ran a canonical network of molecular interactions centered on bound nucleotide. This network presumably performs a crucial structural and/or mechanistic role considering that it has persisted for more than a billion years after the divergence of these families. We call these ‘FY-pivot’ GTPases after their most distinguishing feature, a phenylalanine or tyrosine that functions as a pivot within this network. Specific families deviate somewhat from canonical features in interesting ways, presumably reflecting their functional specialization during evolution. We illustrate this here for Ran GTPases, within which two highly conserved histidines, His30 and His139, strikingly diverge from their canonical counterparts. These, along with other residues specifically conserved in Ran, such as Tyr98, Lys99, and Phe138, appear to work in conjunction with FY-pivot canonical residues to facilitate alternative conformations in which these histidines are strategically positioned to couple Ran's basic patch and C-terminal switch to nucleotide exchange and effector binding. Other core components of the cellular machinery are likewise amenable to this approach, which we term ContrastHierarchical Alignment andInteraction Network (CHAIN) analysis.

[Supplemental material is available online atwww.genome.org.]

Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL neuwald{at}cshl.org; FAX: 516-367-8461.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.862303.

    • Received October 2, 2002.
    • Accepted February 7, 2003.
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