A conserved, N-terminal tyrosine signal directs Ras for inhibition by Rabex-5.

in PLoS genetics by Chalita Washington, Rachel Chernet, Rewatee H Gokhale, Yesenia Martino-Cortez, Hsiu-Yu Liu, Ashley M Rosenberg, Sivan Shahar, Cathie M Pfleger

TLDR

  • The study investigates how a protein called Rabex-5 helps control a protein called Ras, which is involved in many diseases. The study found that Rabex-5 needs a specific part of Ras called Y4 to work properly. The study also found that other proteins called JAK2, SRC, and EGFR help control Ras by promoting the phosphorylation of Y4. The study highlights the importance of these proteins in maintaining Ras pathway homeostasis and preventing tissue transformation.

Abstract

Dysregulation of the Ras oncogene in development causes developmental disorders, "Rasopathies," whereas mutational activation or amplification of Ras in differentiated tissues causes cancer. Rabex-5 (also called RabGEF1) inhibits Ras by promoting Ras mono- and di-ubiquitination. We report here that Rabex-5-mediated Ras ubiquitination requires Ras Tyrosine 4 (Y4), a site of known phosphorylation. Ras substitution mutants insensitive to Y4 phosphorylation did not undergo Rabex-5-mediated ubiquitination in cells and exhibited Ras gain-of-function phenotypes in vivo. Ras Y4 phosphomimic substitution increased Rabex-5-mediated ubiquitination in cells. Y4 phosphomimic substitution in oncogenic Ras blocked the morphological phenotypes associated with oncogenic Ras in vivo dependent on the presence of Rabex-5. We developed polyclonal antibodies raised against an N-terminal Ras peptide phosphorylated at Y4. These anti-phospho-Y4 antibodies showed dramatic recognition of recombinant wild-type Ras and RasG12V proteins when incubated with JAK2 or SRC kinases but not of RasY4F or RasY4F,G12V recombinant proteins suggesting that JAK2 and SRC could promote phosphorylation of Ras proteins at Y4 in vitro. Anti-phospho-Y4 antibodies also showed recognition of RasG12V protein, but not wild-type Ras, when incubated with EGFR. A role for JAK2, SRC, and EGFR (kinases with well-known roles to activate signaling through Ras), to promote Ras Y4 phosphorylation could represent a feedback mechanism to limit Ras activation and thus establish Ras homeostasis. Notably, rare variants of Ras at Y4 have been found in cerebellar glioblastomas. Therefore, our work identifies a physiologically relevant Ras ubiquitination signal and highlights a requirement for Y4 for Ras inhibition by Rabex-5 to maintain Ras pathway homeostasis and to prevent tissue transformation.

Overview

  • The study investigates the role of Rabex-5 in regulating Ras ubiquitination and its impact on Ras pathway homeostasis. The study focuses on the importance of Ras Tyrosine 4 (Y4) in Rabex-5-mediated Ras ubiquitination and its role in limiting Ras activation. The study aims to identify a physiologically relevant Ras ubiquitination signal and highlight the requirement for Y4 for Ras inhibition by Rabex-5 to maintain Ras pathway homeostasis and prevent tissue transformation. The study uses a combination of in vitro and in vivo experiments to investigate the role of Rabex-5 in Ras ubiquitination and its impact on Ras pathway homeostasis.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The study compares the outcomes observed under different experimental conditions or interventions, specifically the impact of Rabex-5-mediated Ras ubiquitination on Ras pathway homeostasis. The study identifies a requirement for Ras Tyrosine 4 (Y4) for Rabex-5-mediated Ras ubiquitination and its role in limiting Ras activation. The study also highlights the impact of JAK2, SRC, and EGFR on Ras Y4 phosphorylation and their role in limiting Ras activation. The study identifies a physiologically relevant Ras ubiquitination signal and highlights the requirement for Y4 for Ras inhibition by Rabex-5 to maintain Ras pathway homeostasis and prevent tissue transformation.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study's findings have significant implications for the field of research and clinical practice, as they identify a physiologically relevant Ras ubiquitination signal and highlight the requirement for Y4 for Ras inhibition by Rabex-5 to maintain Ras pathway homeostasis and prevent tissue transformation. The study also identifies the role of JAK2, SRC, and EGFR in limiting Ras activation and highlights the potential for targeting these kinases to prevent tissue transformation. Future research directions could include further investigation of the role of Rabex-5 in Ras ubiquitination and its impact on Ras pathway homeostasis, as well as the development of targeted therapies to prevent tissue transformation.