A NOVEL ONCOGENE, OST, ENCODES A GUANINE-NUCLEOTIDE EXCHANGE FACTOR THAT POTENTIALLY LINKS RHO AND RAC SIGNALING PATHWAYS

Citation
Y. Horii et al., A NOVEL ONCOGENE, OST, ENCODES A GUANINE-NUCLEOTIDE EXCHANGE FACTOR THAT POTENTIALLY LINKS RHO AND RAC SIGNALING PATHWAYS, EMBO journal, 13(20), 1994, pp. 4776-4786
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
02614189
Volume
13
Issue
20
Year of publication
1994
Pages
4776 - 4786
Database
ISI
SICI code
0261-4189(1994)13:20<4776:ANOOEA>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Transfection of NIH3T3 cells with an osteosarcoma expression cDNA libr ary led to the appearance of foci of morphologically transformed cells which were found to harbor a novel oncogene, ost. The ost product was activated by truncation of the N-terminal domain of the ost proto-onc ogene and was highly tumorigenic in nude mouse assays. The proto-ost c DNA, isolated subsequently, encodes a predicted protein of 100 kDa con taining DH (Dbl homology) and PH (pleckstrin homology) domains. Ost is mainly phosphorylated on serine and localized in the cytoplasm. Purif ied Ost protein catalyzed guanine nucleotide exchange on RhoA and Cdc4 2 among the Rho and Ras family members tested, indicating that Ost can activate these small GTP-binding proteins. Ost did not detectably ass ociate with RhoA or Cdc42, but interacted specifically with the GTP-bo und form of Rac1, suggesting that Ost can function as an effector of R ac1. These results suggest that Ost is a critical regulatory component which links pathways that signal through Rac1, RhoA and Cdc42. Of the tissues examined, expression of osf was the highest in brain and coul d be localized to neurons and alpha-tanycytes, suggesting that Ost may participate in axonal transport in these specialized cells.