Summary of ssbd-repos-000322

SSBD:database
URL

Name
ssbd-repos-000322 (322-Ikari-membraneRas)
URL
DOI
-

Title
Intracellular distribution of exogenous H-Ras in HeLa cells.
Description
-
Submited Date
-
Release Date
2024-11-25
Updated Date
-
License
Funding information
-
File formats
Data size
27.6 MB

Organism
Homo sapiens
Strain
-
Cell Line
HeLa Cell
Genes
NA
Proteins
NA

GO Molecular Function (MF)
NA
GO Biological Process (BP)
protein targeting
GO Cellular Component (CC)
NA
Study Type
NA
Imaging Methods
fluorescence microscopy, confocal microscopy

Method Summary
-
Related paper(s)

Masaomi Ikari, Hiromasa Yagi, Takuma Kasai, Kohsuke Inomata, Masahiro Ito, Kae Higuchi, Natsuko Matsuda, Yutaka Ito, Takanori Kigawa (2023) Direct Observation of Membrane-Associated H-Ras in the Native Cellular Environment by In-Cell (19)F-NMR Spectroscopy., JACS Au, Volume 3, Number 6, pp. 1658-1669

Published in 2023 Jun 26 (Electronic publication in June 1, 2023, midnight )

(Abstract) Ras acts as a molecular switch to control intracellular signaling on the plasma membrane (PM). Elucidating how Ras associates with PM in the native cellular environment is crucial for understanding its control mechanism. Here, we used in-cell nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy combined with site-specific (19)F-labeling to explore the membrane-associated states of H-Ras in living cells. The site-specific incorporation of p-trifluoromethoxyphenylalanine (OCF(3)Phe) at three different sites of H-Ras, i.e., Tyr32 in switch I, Tyr96 interacting with switch II, and Tyr157 on helix alpha5, allowed the characterization of their conformational states depending on the nucleotide-bound states and an oncogenic mutational state. Exogenously delivered (19)F-labeled H-Ras protein containing a C-terminal hypervariable region was assimilated via endogenous membrane-trafficking, enabling proper association with the cell membrane compartments. Despite poor sensitivity of the in-cell NMR spectra of membrane-associated H-Ras, the Bayesian spectral deconvolution identified distinct signal components on three (19)F-labeled sites, thus offering the conformational multiplicity of H-Ras on the PM. Our study may be helpful in elucidating the atomic-scale picture of membrane-associated proteins in living cells.

Contact(s)
Takanori Kigawa
Organization(s)
RIKEN , Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research
Image Data Contributors
Quantitative Data Contributors

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