Cancer-promoting Ras protein exists in a pair within cells
2021-06-02
(Press-News.org) Researchers from Bochum and Osnabrück have gained new insights into the structure of the Ras protein, which acts as a molecular switch for cell growth and is involved in the development of cancer. With the help of fluorescence markings, they have demonstrated that the protein is deposited in a pair at the cell membrane, and with the very structure that they predicted in theory back in 2012. The team from the Bochum Center for Protein Diagnostics (PRODI) hopes that these findings will open up a new approach for the development of cancer medications. The researchers from Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) and Osnabrück University published the results in the Journal of Chemical Science in May 2021.
In an activated state, the Ras protein is bound to the molecule guanosine triphosphate, GTP for short. Ras separates one of the phosphate groups from the GTP molecule, thus switching off cell growth. Malfunctions of the Ras protein can cause it to remain in an active state or switch off with a significant delay. This causes uncontrolled cell growth and, as a result, cancer. Almost all attempts to find an active ingredient that docks to individual Ras proteins have so far failed.
Stronger in a pair
Other studies have since shown that the clustering of Ras as a pair causes the signal for cell growth to be transmitted considerably better. "If we could find a way to disrupt the formation of a pair of malfunctioning Ras proteins using an active ingredient, their signal for cell growth would be significantly weakened," says Professor Klaus Gerwert, Founding Director of PRODI. "As a result, the knowledge of the Ras pair structure offers a new starting point for active ingredients to combat cancer." Bioinformatic methods could help in the search for potential active ingredients. "However, the precise structure of the interface between the two Ras proteins needs to be known for this," explains Dr. Till Rudack, lead author of the current study.
Many different contradictory pair models
In 2012, the Bochum group led by Klaus Gerwert identified a structure for the Ras pair at the cell membrane using a specially developed combination of computer-aided and experimental methods. With biomolecular simulations, the group also predicted an initial model of the interface between the two proteins. However, the precise structure of the interface was the subject of controversial debate in the following years and many other contradictory structure models were predicted. "In order to dispel the controversy, experimental data are required to unequivocally validate the model," says Associate Professor Dr. Carsten Kötting, Project Group Leader at PRODI. These data were provided by the researchers in their current work.
They used the FRET method, short for fluorescence resonance energy transfer, which acts as a kind of molecular yardstick and is used to measure distances between proteins. To do this, two proteins are marked with two different dyes. If they are very close together, energy is transferred from one dye to the other. The distance between the proteins is determined based on the ratio of transferred energy. In order to ascertain the orientation of the two Ras proteins in the pair in relation to each other, the researchers had to measure the distances at different points. "We applied an innovative method to incorporate amino acids into the Ras protein, which are not found naturally in the protein but can attach to the dyes," explains Carsten Kötting.
Exchange of amino acids destroys the pair
The researchers thus measured a total of four different distances. They then examined with which of the pair models these distances correlated. Their analysis included all of the previously published pair models as well as a further 100 potential models that they predicted by computational methods. However, only one arrangement of the pair matched all four experimentally determined distances. "This arrangement corresponds to the structure we predicted back in 2012," summarises Till Rudack.
In further experiments, the researchers exchanged two of the most important amino acids at the point of contact between the two Ras proteins. The result: a pair was no longer formed. "The fact that the formation of a pair could be prevented by exchanging amino acids makes me optimistic that we can use the contact point of the Ras pair as a point of attack for active ingredients in the future," says Klaus Gerwert.
INFORMATION:
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-06-02
Prenuptial agreements, or "prenups," can be difficult to talk about. But a recent study offers insights into how people can discuss this often taboo subject. One approach? Use metaphors.
"Many people view prenups as being negative, and argue that they indicate a lack of faith in the marriage from the outset," says Lynsey Romo, corresponding author of the study and an associate professor of communication at North Carolina State University. "By the same token, we know from other research that open communication about financial issues contributes to successful relationships.
"And yet there is virtually no academic research on prenups. So how do people talk about prenups? How do they make sense of them? That's what we wanted ...
2021-06-02
SAN ANTONIO (June 2, 2021) -- Scientists from The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio have discovered a mechanism by which SARS-CoV-2 exploits changes in metal ion concentrations to disguise itself in the body. Varying concentrations of metal ions -- positively charged atoms such as magnesium, manganese and calcium -- are observed in hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
"This is a newly described metal-dependent mechanism by which these ions help the virus to evade immune surveillance," said END ...
2021-06-02
RUDN University chemists proposed a new way to synthesize catalysts for the conversion of ethyl alcohol. The obtained materials are promising catalysts for the selective conversion of ethanol, which is an important stage in the development of an alternative technology for obtaining valuable chemical synthesis products based on plant raw materials. The results of the study are published in Catalysis Today.
Ethanol fuel is ethyl alcohol, it is produced from plant material by fermentation of industrial or agricultural waste biomass. It is used as a more environmentally ...
2021-06-02
In collaborative international effort, laser physicists at LMU have built the first hybrid plasma accelerator.
Particle accelerators have made crucial contributions to some of the most spectacular scientific discoveries of modern times, and greatly augmented our knowledge of the structure of matter. Now a team of laser physicists led by Prof. Stefan Karsch at the Ludwig-Maximilian University (LMU) in Munich and the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, in cooperation with scientists based at the Helmholtz Centre in Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR), the Laboratoire d'Optique Appliquée in Paris (LOA), Strathclyde University in Glasgow and the DESY Electron Synchrotron in Hamburg, have now achieved a significant ...
2021-06-02
Amsterdam, June 2, 2021 - On the eve of the 50th anniversary of the 1972 Stockholm conference that created the United Nations Environmental Programme, it is clear that the global environmental situation has only deteriorated. In "Our Earth Matters: Pathways to a Better Common Environmental Future," an extended special issue of Environmental Policy and Law (EPL), leading scholars from more than five continents call for an honest introspection of what has been attained over the last 50 years relating to regulatory processes and laws and explore future trajectories with new ideas and frameworks for environmental governance in the 21st century.
"Our objective is to fire the imaginations of scholars and decision-makers to re-examine current approaches and to explore the future, ...
2021-06-02
Smoking in early puberty in boys may have negative consequences for their future generations of offspring, a study from the University of Bergen (UiB) shows.
By continued analysis of data gathered in the large international RHINESSA, RHINE and ECRHS studies, researchers have found that the health of future generations depends on actions and decisions made by young people today. This is particularly relevant for boys in early puberty and mothers/grandmothers both pre-pregnancy and during pregnancy, the study shows.
The paper "Prenatal and prepubertal exposures to tobacco smoke in ...
2021-06-02
Humans can observe what and where something happens around them with their hearing, as long as sound frequencies lie between 20 Hz and 20 000 Hz. Researchers at Aalto University have now developed a new audio technique that enables people to also hear ultrasonic sources that generate sound at frequencies above 20,000 Hz with simultaneous perception of their direction. The results have been published in Scientific Reports on 2 June 2021.
'In our study, we used bats in their natural habitat as sources of ultrasonic sound. With our new technique, we can now hear the directions-of-arrival of bat sounds, which means we can track bats in flight and hear where they are - we're ...
2021-06-02
An international team of astrophysicists led by the Stellar Astrophysics Group of the University of Alicante (UA), the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC), and the University of Valparaíso (Chile) has discovered a massive cluster of stars of intermediate age in the direction of the Scutum constellation. This object, which has been named Valparaíso 1, lies some seven thousand light years away from the Sun, and contains at least fifteen thousand stars. To detect it, observations have been combined from ESA's Gaia satellite, and various ground-based telescopes, ...
2021-06-02
Tsukuba, Japan - It is estimated that during a heart attack, one billion cells in the heart are lost. In the wake of the heart attack, the lost tissue is replaced by scar tissue, which can lead to heart failure, arrhythmia and death. In a new study, researchers from the University of Tsukuba have shown how cells in the scar tissue can be converted to heart muscle cells, effectively regenerating the injured heart.
The injured heart of humans and rodents alike does not have the capacity to regenerate after injury. Therefore, the only way for the heart to heal the wound is to build a scar tissue in the injured area. A longstanding goal in the field has been to find a way to reprogram fibroblasts, ...
2021-06-02
Bone-regenerating treatments are in high demand due to the ageing population. Increasingly, the orthopaedic biomaterials used to support these treatments are designed to be "immunomodulatory", i.e., guide the body's inflammatory response. They do this by encouraging macrophages - a type of white blood cell that surrounds and kills microorganisms - to adopt new roles based on signals and stimuli in their microenvironment. This approach has proved effective for developing new bone and for encouraging existing bone to accept artificial implants.
Magnesium is a mineral that not only helps to maintain normal nerve and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Cancer-promoting Ras protein exists in a pair within cells