Biochemical and structural analyses reveal that the tumor suppressor neurofibromin (NF1) forms a high-affinity dimer.
Mukul SherekarSae-Won HanRodolfo GhirlandoSimon MessingMatthew DrewDana RabaraTimothy WaybrightPuneet JunejaHugh O'NeillChristopher B StanleyDebsindhu BhowmikArvind RamanathanSriram SubramaniamDwight V NissleyWilliam GilletteFrank McCormickDominic EspositoPublished in: The Journal of biological chemistry (2019)
Neurofibromin is a tumor suppressor encoded by the NF1 gene, which is mutated in Rasopathy disease neurofibromatosis type I. Defects in NF1 lead to aberrant signaling through the RAS-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway due to disruption of the neurofibromin GTPase-activating function on RAS family small GTPases. Very little is known about the function of most of the neurofibromin protein; to date, biochemical and structural data exist only for its GAP domain and a region containing a Sec-PH motif. To better understand the role of this large protein, here we carried out a series of biochemical and biophysical experiments, including size-exclusion chromatography-multiangle light scattering (SEC-MALS), small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering, and analytical ultracentrifugation, indicating that full-length neurofibromin forms a high-affinity dimer. We observed that neurofibromin dimerization also occurs in human cells and likely has biological and clinical implications. Analysis of purified full-length and truncated neurofibromin variants by negative-stain EM revealed the overall architecture of the dimer and predicted the potential interactions that contribute to the dimer interface. We could reconstitute structures resembling high-affinity full-length dimers by mixing N- and C-terminal protein domains in vitro The reconstituted neurofibromin was capable of GTPase activation in vitro, and co-expression of the two domains in human cells effectively recapitulated the activity of full-length neurofibromin. Taken together, these results suggest how neurofibromin dimers might form and be stabilized within the cell.
Keyphrases
- signaling pathway
- single cell
- high resolution
- lps induced
- oxidative stress
- nuclear factor
- amino acid
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- copy number
- genome wide
- stem cells
- poor prognosis
- magnetic resonance
- dna methylation
- machine learning
- cell proliferation
- risk assessment
- ms ms
- protein kinase
- tyrosine kinase
- data analysis