Spatial Cycling of Rab GTPase, Driven by the GTPase Cycle, Controls Rab's Subcellular Distribution.
Stephanie VossFu LiAndreas RätzMatthias RögerYao-Wen WuPublished in: Biochemistry (2019)
Rab GTPases (>60 members in humans) function as master regulators of intracellular membrane trafficking. Correct and specific localization of Rab proteins is required for their function. How the distinct spatial distribution of Rab GTPases in the cell is regulated remains elusive. To globally assess the subcellular localization of Rab1, we determined kinetic parameters of two pathways that control the spatial cycles of Rab1, i.e., vesicular transport and GDP dissociation inhibitor (GDI)-mediated recycling. We demonstrate that the switching between GTP and GDP binding states, which is governed by guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs), GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), GDI, and GDI displacement factor (GDF), is a major determinant of Rab1's ability to effectively cycle between cellular compartments and eventually its subcellular distribution. In silico perturbations of vesicular transport, GEFs, GAPs, GDI, and GDF using a mathematical model with simplified cellular geometries showed that these regulators play an important role in the subcellular distribution and activity of Rab1.