Inhibition of Oncogenic and Activated Wild-Type ras-p21 Protein-Induced Oocyte Maturation by Peptides from the ras-Binding Domain of the raf-p74 Protein, Identified from Molecular Dynamics Calculations

Author: Chung Denise   Amar Shazia   Glozman Albert   Chen James M.   Friedman Fred K.   Robinson Richard   Monaco Regina   Brandt-Rauf Paul   Yamaizumi Z.   Pincus Matthew R.  

Publisher: Springer Publishing Company

ISSN: 0277-8033

Source: Journal of Protein Chemistry, Vol.16, Iss.6, 1997-08, pp. : 631-635

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Abstract

In the preceding paper we found from molecular dynamics calculations that the structure of the ras-binding domain (RBD) of raf changes predominantly in three regions depending upon whether it binds to ras-p21 protein or to its inhibitor protein, rap-1A. These three regions of the RBD involve residues from the protein–protein interaction interface, e.g., between residues 60 and 72, residues 97–110, and 111–121. Since the rap-1A–RBD complex is inactive, these three regions are implicated in ras-p21-induced activation of raf. We have therefore co-microinjected peptides corresponding to these three regions, 62–76, 97–110, and 111–121, into oocytes with oncogenic p21 and microinjected them into oocytes incubated in in insulin, which activates normal p2l. All three peptides, but not a control peptide, strongly inhibit both oncogenic p21- and insulin-induced oocyte maturation. These findings corroborate our conclusions from the theoretical results that these three regions constitute raf effector domains. Since the 97–110 peptide is the strongest inhibitor of oncogenic p21, while the 111–121 peptide is the strongest inhibitor of insulin-induced oocyte maturation, the possibility exists that oncogenic and activated normal p21 proteins interact differently with the RBD of raf.

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