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Cell Growth and Development

Differential Roles of Akt, Rac, and Ral in R-Ras-Mediated Cellular Transformation, Adhesion, and Survival

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 6333-6344 | Received 19 Jan 1999, Accepted 09 Jun 1999, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Multiple biological functions have been ascribed to the Ras-related G protein R-Ras. These include the ability to transform NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, the promotion of cell adhesion, and the regulation of apoptotic responses in hematopoietic cells. To investigate the signaling mechanisms responsible for these biological phenotypes, we compared three R-Ras effector loop mutants (S61, G63, and C66) for their relative biological and biochemical properties. While the S61 mutant retained the ability to cause transformation, both the G63 and the C66 mutants were defective in this biological activity. On the other hand, while both the S61 and the C66 mutants failed to promote cell adhesion and survival in 32D cells, the G63 mutant retained the ability to induce these biological activities. Thus, the ability of R-Ras to transform cells could be dissociated from its propensity to promote cell adhesion and survival. Although the transformation-competent S61 mutant bound preferentially to c-Raf, it only weakly stimulated the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activity, and a dominant negative mutant of MEK did not significantly perturb R-Ras oncogenicity. Instead, a dominant negative mutant of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) drastically inhibited the oncogenic potential of R-Ras. Interestingly, the ability of the G63 mutant to induce cell adhesion and survival was closely associated with the PI3-K-dependent signaling cascades. To further delineate R-Ras downstream signaling events, we observed that while a dominant negative mutant of Akt/protein kinase inhibited the ability of R-Ras to promote cell survival, both dominant negative mutants of Rac and Ral suppressed cell adhesion stimulated by R-Ras. Thus, the biological actions of R-Ras are mediated by multiple effectors, with PI3-K-dependent signaling cascades being critical to its functions.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank I. Gelman, J. Pierce, L. Van Aelst, and L.-H. Wang for helpful discussions and technical advice and R. Krauss for critical review of the manuscript.

This work was supported by grants from the NIH (CA66654 and CA78509), an Army Breast Cancer Training Grant to M.O., and a Career Scientist Award of the Irma T. Hirschl Foundation to A.M.-L.C.

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