guanine nucleotide exchange factors
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciek Adamowski ◽  
Ivana Matijević ◽  
Jiří Friml

ARF small GTPases are molecular switches acting in intracellular trafficking. Their cycles of activity are controlled by regulators, ARF Guanine nucleotide Exchange Factors (ARF-GEFs) and ARF GTPase Activating Proteins (ARF-GAPs). The ARF-GEF GNOM (GN) and the ARF-GAP VAN3 share a prominent function in auxin-mediated developmental patterning, but the ARFs which they might control were not identified. We conducted a loss-of-function and localization-based screening of the ARF/ARF-LIKE gene family in Arabidopsis thaliana with the primary aim of identifying functional partners of GN and VAN3, while extending the limited understanding of this gene group as a whole. We identified a function of ARLA1 in branching angle control. Mutants lacking the variably localized ARLB1, ARFB1, ARFC1, ARFD1, and ARF3, even in high order combinations, do not exhibit any evident phenotypes. Loss of function arfa1 phenotypes support a major role of ARFA1 in growth and development overall, but patterning defects typical to gn loss of function are not found. ARFA1 are not localized at the plasma membrane, where GN and VAN3 carry out developmental patterning function according to current models. Taken together, putative ARF partners of GN and VAN3 in developmental patterning cannot be conclusively identified.


2022 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mengqi Li ◽  
Qingzheng Jiao ◽  
Wenqiang Xin ◽  
Shulin Niu ◽  
Mingming Liu ◽  
...  

Atherosclerosis is a leading cause of cardiovascular disease, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease accounts for one-third of global deaths. However, the mechanism of atherosclerosis is not fully understood. It is well-known that the Rho GTPase family, especially Rho A, plays a vital role in the development and progression of arteriosclerosis. Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factors (Rho GEFs), which act upstream of Rho GTPases, are also involved in the atheromatous pathological process. Despite some research on the role of Rho GEFS in the regulation of atherosclerosis, the number of studies is small relative to studies on the essential function of Rho GEFs. Some studies have preliminarily revealed Rho GEF regulation of atherosclerosis by experiments in vivo and in vitro. Herein, we review the advances in research on the relationship and interaction between Rho GEFs and atheroma to provide a potential reference for further study of atherosclerosis.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 5599
Author(s):  
Hyeon Jin Kim ◽  
Han Na Lee ◽  
Mi Suk Jeong ◽  
Se Bok Jang

RAS proteins play a role in many physiological signals transduction processes, including cell growth, division, and survival. The Ras protein has amino acids 188-189 and functions as GTPase. These proteins are switch molecules that cycle between inactive GDP-bound and active GTP-bound by guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs). KRAS is one of the Ras superfamily isoforms (N-RAS, H-RAS, and K-RAS) that frequently mutate in cancer. The mutation of KRAS is essentially performing the transformation in humans. Since most RAS proteins belong to GTPase, mutated and GTP-bound active RAS is found in many cancers. Despite KRAS being an important molecule in mostly human cancer, including pancreatic and breast, numerous efforts in years past have persisted in cancer therapy targeting KRAS mutant. This review summarizes the biological characteristics of these proteins and the recent progress in the exploration of KRAS-targeted anticancer, leading to new insight.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerd Jürgens ◽  
Sabine Brumm ◽  
Hauke Beckmann ◽  
Sandra Richter ◽  
Manoj K Singh ◽  
...  

Functionally divergent paralogs of homomeric proteins do not form potentially deleterious heteromers, which requires distinction between self and non-self (Hochberg et al., 2018; Marchant et al, 2019; Marsh and Teichmann, 2015). In Arabidopsis, two ARF guanine-nucleotide exchange factors (ARF-GEFs) related to mammalian GBF1, named GNOM and GNL1, can mediate coatomer complex (COPI)-coated vesicle formation in retrograde Golgi-endoplasmic reticulum (ER) traffic (Geldner et al., 2003; Richter et al., 2007; Teh and Moore, 2007). Unlike GNL1, however, GNOM is also required for polar recycling of endocytosed auxin efflux regulator PIN1 from endosomes to the plasma membrane. Here we show that these paralogues form homodimers constitutively but no heterodimers. We also address why and how GNOM and GNL1 might be kept separate. These paralogues share a common domain organisation and each N-terminal dimerisation (DCB) domain can interact with the complementary fragment (DDCB) of its own and the other protein. However, unlike self-interacting DCBGNOM (Grebe et al., 2000; Anders et al., 2008), DCBGNL1 did not interact with itself nor DCBGNOM. DCBGNOM removal or replacement with DCBGNL1, but not disruption of cysteine bridges that stabilise DCB-DCB interaction, resulted in GNOM-GNL1 heterodimers which impaired developmental processes such as lateral root formation. We propose precocious self-interaction of the DCBGNOM domain as a mechanism to preclude formation of fitness-reducing GNOM-GNL1 heterodimers.


Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1340
Author(s):  
Lejia Xu ◽  
Yuki Nagai ◽  
Yotaro Kajihara ◽  
Genta Ito ◽  
Taisuke Tomita

Rab proteins are small GTPases that act as molecular switches for intracellular vesicle trafficking. Although their function is mainly regulated by regulatory proteins such as GTPase-activating proteins and guanine nucleotide exchange factors, recent studies have shown that some Rab proteins are physiologically phosphorylated in the switch II region by Rab kinases. As the switch II region of Rab proteins undergoes a conformational change depending on the bound nucleotide, it plays an essential role in their function as a ‘switch’. Initially, the phosphorylation of Rab proteins in the switch II region was shown to inhibit the association with regulatory proteins. However, recent studies suggest that it also regulates the binding of Rab proteins to effector proteins, determining which pathways to regulate. These findings suggest that the regulation of the Rab function may be more dynamically regulated by phosphorylation than just through the association with regulatory proteins. In this review, we summarize the recent findings and discuss the physiological and pathological roles of Rab phosphorylation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clàudia Salat-Canela ◽  
Mercè Carmona ◽  
Rebeca Martín-García ◽  
Pilar Pérez ◽  
José Ayté ◽  
...  

Cdc42 rules cell polarity and growth in fission yeast. It is negatively and positively regulated by GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) and by Guanine-nucleotide Exchange factors (GEFs), respectively. Active Cdc42-GTP localizes to the poles, where it associates with numerous proteins constituting the polarity module. However, little is known about its down-regulation. We describe here that oxidative stress causes Sty1 kinase-dependent Cdc42 inactivation at cell poles. Both the amount of active Cdc42 at poles and cell length inversely correlate with Sty1 activity, explaining the elongated morphology of Δsty1 cells. We have created stress-blinded cell poles by either eliminating two Cdc42 GAPs or through the constitutive tethering of a GEF to the cell tips, and biochemically demonstrate that Rga3 is a direct substrate of Sty1. We propose that stress-activated Sty1 promotes GTP hydrolysis and prevents GEF activity at the cell tips, thus leading to the inhibition of Cdc42 and polarized growth cessation.


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