Hall A
Chester Beatty Laboratories, Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom.
Mol Biol Cell. 1992 May;3(5):475-9. doi: 10.1091/mbc.3.5.475.
Incorporation of the available data on rac in neutrophils, CDC42 in yeast, and rho in fibroblasts suggests a general model for the function of rho-like GTPase (Figure 1). Conversion of an inactive cytoplasmic rho-related p21GDP/GDI complex to active p21. GTP occurs by inhibition of GAP and/or stimulation of exchange factors in response to cell signals. p21.GTP is then able to interact with its target at the plasma membrane. This could result in a conformational change in the target, enabling it to bind cytosolic protein(s). Alternatively, p21.GTP could be actively involved in transporting cytosolic protein(s) to the target. A GAP protein, perhaps intrinsic to the complex, would stimulate GTP hydrolysis allowing p21.GDP to dissociate. Solubilization of p21GDP by interaction with GDI would complete a cycle. What about the nature of the final complex? The rac-regulated NADPH oxidase complex in neutrophils is currently the best understood and most amenable to further biochemical analysis. Two plasma-membrane bound subunits encode the catalytic function necessary for producing superoxide, but the two cytosolic proteins, p47 and p67, are essential for activity. Why the complexity? Production of superoxide is tightly coordinated with phagocytosis, a membrane process driven by rearrangement of cortical actin. This is not unrelated to the membrane ruffling and macropinocytosis that we observe in fibroblasts microinjected with p21rac. It is tempting to speculate, therefore, that in neutrophils rac is involved not only in promoting the assembly of the NADPH oxidase but also in the coordinate reorganization of cortical actin leading to phagocytosis. For CDC42 controlled bud assembly in yeast, the components of the plasma-membrane complex are not so clear. By analogy with rac in neutrophils, it seems likely that CDC42 is involved in promoting the assembly of cytosolic components at the bud site on the plasma membrane. These putative cytosolic proteins have not yet been identified, but BEM1 and ABP1 are two possible candidates. The biochemical basis for the stimulation of adhesion plaques and actin stress fibers by p21rho in fibroblasts is also unclear. However, components of the adhesion plaque such as vinculin and talin are known to be cytosolic when not complexed with integrin receptors, and rho could be involved in regulating their assembly into the adhesion plaque. Several things are still difficult to incorporate into this model. First the target for CDC42, the bud site, although not yet structurally defined requires the activity of another small GTPase, BUD1. Similarly, in activated neutrophils, the NADPH oxidase is found in a complex with rap1, the mammalian homologue of BUD1 (BoKoch et al., 1989). It seems likely, therefore, that the target is not simply a plasma-membrane protein but may be a complex of proteins whose formation is under the control of the rap1/BUD1 GTPase. The other black box in this model is the actin connection: activation of bud assembly by CDC42 is followed by actin polymerization, activation of NADPH oxidase in neutrophils occurs concomitantly with phagocytosis, a cortical actin-dependent process, and p21rho in fibroblasts couples the formation of adhesion plaques to actin stress fibers. One possible link between the GTPase-driven assembly of a plasma-membrane complex and actin polymerization could involve the SH3 domain. Interestingly, both p47 and p67 and yeast ABP1 and BEM1 have SH3 domain. If rho-like GTPases recognize plasma-membrane targets already associated with cortical actin, then this could promote an interaction with a subset of SH3-containing proteins. The result of this would be a GTPase-regulated aggregation of a group of proteins at a single site in the plasma membrane. It is not too difficult to imagine biological processes where such a spatial integration of different biochemical activities would be essential: coupling the assembly of bud components to the formation of actin fibers in yeast; or the activation of NADPH oxidase to phagocytosis in neutrophils; or the assembly of adhesion plaques and the formation of actin stress fibers in fibroblasts are just three examples that have emerged so far. In conclusion, although rho-like GTPases clearly have distinct roles in different mammalian cell types and in yeast, their underlying mechanism of action appears to be strikingly similar. Whether this will remain so when there are some biochemical data to back up these initial observations, time will tell.
综合有关中性粒细胞中的rac、酵母中的CDC42和成纤维细胞中的rho的现有数据,提示了一种类rho GTP酶功能的通用模型(图1)。无活性的胞质rho相关p21GDP/GDI复合物向活性p21.GTP的转变,是通过抑制GAP和/或响应细胞信号刺激交换因子而发生的。然后p21.GTP能够在质膜处与其靶标相互作用。这可能导致靶标发生构象变化,使其能够结合胞质蛋白。或者,p21.GTP可能积极参与将胞质蛋白转运至靶标。一种GAP蛋白,可能是复合物固有的,会刺激GTP水解,使p21.GDP解离。p21GDP与GDI相互作用使其溶解,从而完成一个循环。最终复合物的性质如何呢?中性粒细胞中由rac调节的NADPH氧化酶复合物目前是理解最透彻且最适合进一步进行生化分析的。两个质膜结合亚基编码产生超氧化物所需的催化功能,但两个胞质蛋白p47和p67对活性至关重要。为何如此复杂呢?超氧化物的产生与吞噬作用紧密协调,吞噬作用是一种由皮质肌动蛋白重排驱动的膜过程。这与我们在用p21rac显微注射的成纤维细胞中观察到的膜皱褶和巨吞饮并非无关。因此,很容易推测,在中性粒细胞中rac不仅参与促进NADPH氧化酶的组装,还参与导致吞噬作用的皮质肌动蛋白的协调重组。对于酵母中由CDC42控制的芽组装,质膜复合物的成分尚不清楚。与中性粒细胞中的rac类似,似乎CDC42参与促进质膜上芽位点处胞质成分的组装。这些假定的胞质蛋白尚未被鉴定出来,但BEM1和ABP1是两个可能的候选者。成纤维细胞中p21rho刺激黏着斑和肌动蛋白应力纤维的生化基础也不清楚。然而,已知黏着斑的成分如纽蛋白和踝蛋白在未与整合素受体结合时是胞质的,rho可能参与调节它们组装到黏着斑中。仍有几件事难以纳入该模型。首先,CDC42的靶标芽位点,尽管尚未在结构上确定,但需要另一种小GTP酶BUD1的活性。同样,在活化的中性粒细胞中,NADPH氧化酶与rap1形成复合物,rap1是BUD1的哺乳动物同源物(BoKoch等人,1989)。因此,似乎靶标不仅仅是一种质膜蛋白,而可能是一组蛋白质的复合物,其形成受rap1/BUD1 GTP酶的控制。该模型中的另一个未知因素是肌动蛋白连接:CDC42激活芽组装后接着是肌动蛋白聚合,中性粒细胞中NADPH氧化酶的激活与吞噬作用同时发生,吞噬作用是一个依赖皮质肌动蛋白的过程,而成纤维细胞中的p21rho将黏着斑的形成与肌动蛋白应力纤维联系起来。GTP酶驱动的质膜复合物组装与肌动蛋白聚合之间的一个可能联系可能涉及SH3结构域。有趣的是,p47和p67以及酵母ABP1和BEM1都有SH3结构域。如果类rho GTP酶识别已经与皮质肌动蛋白相关的质膜靶标,那么这可能促进与一部分含SH3结构域的蛋白质相互作用。其结果将是以GTP酶调节的方式在质膜的单个位点聚集一组蛋白质。不难想象在哪些生物学过程中这种不同生化活性的空间整合是必不可少的:将酵母中芽成分的组装与肌动蛋白纤维的形成相耦合;或者将中性粒细胞中NADPH氧化酶的激活与吞噬作用相耦合;或者将成纤维细胞中黏着斑的组装与肌动蛋白应力纤维的形成相耦合,这只是目前出现的三个例子。总之,尽管类rho GTP酶在不同哺乳动物细胞类型和酵母中显然具有不同作用,但其潜在作用机制似乎惊人地相似。当有一些生化数据来支持这些初步观察结果时是否依然如此,时间会给出答案。