Nature, Vol.384, No.6609, 591-596, 1996
Crystal-Structure of the GTPase-Activating Domain of Human P120Gap and Implications for the Interaction with Ras
RAS-RELATED GTP-binding proteins function as molecular switches which cycle between GTP-bound ’on’- and GDP-bound ’off’-states(1), GTP hydrolysis is the common timing mechanism that mediates the return from the ’on’ to the ’off’-state, It is usually slow but can be accelerated by orders of magnitude upon interaction with GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs). In the case of Ras, a major regulator of cellular growth, point mutations are found in approximately 30% of human tumours which render the protein unable to hydrolyse GTP, even in the presence of Ras-GAPs, The first structure determination of a GTPase-activating protein reveals the catalytically active fragment of the Ras-specific p120GAP (ref. 2), GAP-334, as an elongated, exclusively helical protein which appears to represent a novel protein fold, The molecule consists of two domains, one of which contains all the residues conserved among different GAPs for Ras. From the location of conserved residues around a shallow groove in the central domain we can identify the site of interaction with Ras-GTP. This leads to a model for the interaction between Ras and GAP that satisfies numerous biochemical and genetic data on this important regulatory process.
Keywords:TYPE-1 NF1 GENE;PROTEIN;MECHANISM;GAP;HYDROLYSIS;NEUROFIBROMIN;P21;DIFFERENTIATION;MUTAGENESIS;STIMULATION