Reiss Y, Seabra M C, Armstrong S A, Slaughter C A, Goldstein J L, Brown M S
Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235.
J Biol Chem. 1991 Jun 5;266(16):10672-7.
The protein farnesyltransferase purified from rat brain contains two nonidentical subunits, alpha and beta. The holoenzyme forms a stable complex with [3H]farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) that can be isolated by gel filtration. The [3H]FPP is not covalently bound to the enzyme; it is released unaltered when the enzyme is denatured. When incubated with an acceptor such as p21H-ras, the complex transfers [3H]farnesyl from the bound [3H]FPP to the ras protein. This transfer is not sensitive to dilution by unbound FPP, suggesting that the [3H]FPP is bound at a site that leads to direct transfer to the p21H-ras acceptor. Cross-linking studies show that the p21H-ras binds to the lower molecular weight subunit (beta-subunit), raising the possibility that the [3H]FPP binds to the alpha-subunit. If this suggestion can be confirmed, it would invoke a reaction mechanism in which the alpha-subunit acts as a prenyl pyrophosphate carrier that delivers FPP to p21H-ras which is bound to the beta-subunit.