Redox regulation of Ras and Rho GTPases: mechanism and function.

Antioxid Redox Signal

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA.

Published: January 2013

Significance: Oxidation and reduction events are critical to physiological and pathological processes and are highly regulated. Herein, we present evidence for the role of Ras and Rho GTPases in controlling these events and the unique underlying mechanisms. Evidence for redox regulation of Ras GTPases that contain a redox-sensitive cysteine (X) in the conserved NKXD motif is presented, and a growing consensus supports regulation by a thiyl radical-mediated oxidation mechanism. We also discuss the debate within the literature regarding whether 2e(-) oxidation mechanisms also regulate Ras GTPase activity.

Recent Advances: We examine the increasing in vitro and cell-based data supporting oxidant-mediated activation of Rho GTPases that contain a redox-sensitive cysteine at the end of the conserved phosphoryl-binding loop (p-loop) motif (GXXXXG[S/T]C). While this motif is distinct from Ras, these data suggest a similar 1e(-) oxidation-mediated activation mechanism.

Critical Issues: We also review the data showing that the unique p-loop placement of the redox-sensitive cysteine in Rho GTPases supports activation by 2e(-) cysteine oxidation. Finally, we examine the role that Ras and Rho GTPases play in controlling key oxidant-regulating enzymes in the cell, and we speculate on a feedback mechanism.

Future Directions: Given that these GTPases and redox-regulating enzymes are involved in multiple physiological and pathological processes, we discuss future experiments that may clarify the interplay between them.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3518547PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ars.2012.4687DOI Listing

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