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One-way membrane trafficking of SOS in receptor-triggered Ras activation.


ABSTRACT: SOS is a key activator of the small GTPase Ras. In cells, SOS-Ras signaling is thought to be initiated predominantly by membrane recruitment of SOS via the adaptor Grb2 and balanced by rapidly reversible Grb2-SOS binding kinetics. However, SOS has multiple protein and lipid interactions that provide linkage to the membrane. In reconstituted-membrane experiments, these Grb2-independent interactions were sufficient to retain human SOS on the membrane for many minutes, during which a single SOS molecule could processively activate thousands of Ras molecules. These observations raised questions concerning how receptors maintain control of SOS in cells and how membrane-recruited SOS is ultimately released. We addressed these questions in quantitative assays of reconstituted SOS-deficient chicken B-cell signaling systems combined with single-molecule measurements in supported membranes. These studies revealed an essentially one-way trafficking process in which membrane-recruited SOS remains trapped on the membrane and continuously activates Ras until being actively removed via endocytosis.

SUBMITTER: Christensen SM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5016256 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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One-way membrane trafficking of SOS in receptor-triggered Ras activation.

Christensen Sune M SM   Tu Hsiung-Lin HL   Jun Jesse E JE   Alvarez Steven S   Triplet Meredith G MG   Iwig Jeffrey S JS   Yadav Kamlesh K KK   Bar-Sagi Dafna D   Roose Jeroen P JP   Groves Jay T JT  

Nature structural & molecular biology 20160808 9


SOS is a key activator of the small GTPase Ras. In cells, SOS-Ras signaling is thought to be initiated predominantly by membrane recruitment of SOS via the adaptor Grb2 and balanced by rapidly reversible Grb2-SOS binding kinetics. However, SOS has multiple protein and lipid interactions that provide linkage to the membrane. In reconstituted-membrane experiments, these Grb2-independent interactions were sufficient to retain human SOS on the membrane for many minutes, during which a single SOS mol  ...[more]

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