THE GTPase cycle is a versatile regulatory mechanism directing many ce
ll functions(1), and Rab family members use it to regulate intracellul
ar transport(2-4). Current models propose that GTP hydrolysis by Rah p
roteins is either required for membrane fusion or occurs afterwards to
allow recycling of the protein(1-4). To measure the GTPase activity o
f Rab5 in endocytic membrane fusion(5), we engineered a mutant that pr
eferentially binds xanthosine 5'-triphosphate (XTP), Rab5(D136N) and m
onitored the kinetics of [alpha(32)P]-XTP hydrolysis in situ during en
dosome fusion in vitro. Surprisingly, nucleotide hydrolysis occurred e
ven in the absence of membrane fusion, indicating that membrane-bound
Rab5 undergoes futile cycles of GTP (XTP) binding and hydrolysis. Nucl
eotide triphosphate hydrolysis by Rab5 is not conditional on membrane
Fusion and is reduced by its effector Rabaptin-5 (ref. 6). Our data re
veal that the GTP cycle of Rab proteins differs from that of other GTP
ases (for example, EF-Tu) and indicate that GTP hydrolysis acts as a t
imer that determines the frequency of membrane docking/fusion events.