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Article

Signal Integration by Lipid-Mediated Spatial Cross Talk between Ras Nanoclusters

, , , , &
Pages 862-876 | Received 16 Sep 2013, Accepted 17 Dec 2013, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Lipid-anchored Ras GTPases form transient, spatially segregated nanoclusters on the plasma membrane that are essential for high-fidelity signal transmission. The lipid composition of Ras nanoclusters, however, has not previously been investigated. High-resolution spatial mapping shows that different Ras nanoclusters have distinct lipid compositions, indicating that Ras proteins engage in isoform-selective lipid sorting and accounting for different signal outputs from different Ras isoforms. Phosphatidylserine is a common constituent of all Ras nanoclusters but is only an obligate structural component of K-Ras nanoclusters. Segregation of K-Ras and H-Ras into spatially and compositionally distinct lipid assemblies is exquisitely sensitive to plasma membrane phosphatidylserine levels. Phosphatidylserine spatial organization is also modified by Ras nanocluster formation. In consequence, Ras nanoclusters engage in remote lipid-mediated communication, whereby activated H-Ras disrupts the assembly and operation of spatially segregated K-Ras nanoclusters. Computational modeling and experimentation reveal that complex effects of caveolin and cortical actin on Ras nanoclustering are similarly mediated through regulation of phosphatidylserine spatiotemporal dynamics. We conclude that phosphatidylserine maintains the lateral segregation of diverse lipid-based assemblies on the plasma membrane and that lateral connectivity between spatially remote lipid assemblies offers important previously unexplored opportunities for signal integration and signal processing.

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Articles of Significant Interest Selected from This Issue by the Editors

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.01227-13.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by grant GM066717 from the National Institutes of Health, General Medical Sciences (J.F.H.), and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia through grants and research fellowships to R.G.P. (511055, 569542).

We thank Sergio Grinstein, Tamas Balla, and Guangwei Du for providing key reagents.

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