4.7 Article

Mechanistic Insights into the Long-range Allosteric Regulation of KRAS Via Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1) Scaffold Upon SPRED1 Loading

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 434, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2022.167730

Keywords

KRAS; SPRED1; NF1; allosteric regulation; Markov state model

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22077082]
  2. Shanghai Frontiers Science Center of Cellular Homeostasis and Human Diseases, and Innovative Research Team of High-Level Local Universities in Shanghai

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Allosteric regulation plays a crucial role in protein function, but understanding long-range allosteric regulation remains challenging. This study investigates the allosteric regulation of KRAS by SPRED1, providing mechanistic insights and shedding light on long-range allosteric regulation in complex macromolecular systems.
Allosteric regulation is the most direct and efficient way of regulating protein function, wherein proteins transmit the perturbations at one site to another distinct functional site. Deciphering the mechanism of allosteric regulation is of vital importance for the comprehension of both physiological and pathological events in vivo as well as the rational allosteric drug design. However, it remains challenging to elucidate dominant allosteric signal transduction pathways, especially for large and multi-component protein machineries where long-range allosteric regulation exits. One of the quintessential examples having long-range allosteric regulation is the ternary complex, SPRED1-RAS-neurofibromin type 1 (NF1, a RAS GTPase-activating protein), in which SPRED1 facilitates RAS-GTP hydrolysis by interacting with NF1 at a distal, allosteric site from the RAS binding site. To address the underlying mechanism, we per-formed extensive Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics simulations and Markov state model analysis of KRAS-NF1 complex in the presence and absence of SPRED1. Our findings suggested that SPRED1 loading allosterically enhanced KRAS-NF1 binding, but hindered conformational transformation of the NF1 catalytic center for RAS hydrolysis. Moreover, we unveiled the possible allosteric pathways upon SPRED1 binding through difference contact network analysis. This study not only provided an in-depth mechanistic insight into the allosteric regulation of KRAS by SPRED1, but also shed light on the investi-gation of long-range allosteric regulation among complex macromolecular systems.(c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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