Abstract
Overactivation of Ras pathways contributes to oncogenesis and metastasis of epithelial cells in several ways, including interference with cell cycle regulation via the CDK inhibitor p27Kip1 (p27) and disruption of transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) anti-proliferative activity. Here, we show that at high expression levels, constitutively active N-Ras induces cytoplasmic mislocalization of murine and human p27 via the Ral-GEF pathway and disrupts TGF-β-mediated Smad nuclear translocation by activation of the Mek/Erk pathway. While human p27 could also be mislocalized via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway, only Ral-GEF activation was effective for murine p27, which lacks the Thr157 Akt phosphorylation site of human p27. This establishes a novel role for the Ral-GEF pathway in regulating p27 localization. Interference with either Smad translocation or p27 nuclear localization was sufficient to disrupt TGF-β growth inhibition. Moreover, expression of activated N-Ras or specific effector loop mutants at lower levels using retroviral vectors induced p27 mislocalization but did not inhibit Smad2/3 translocation, indicating that the effects on p27 localization occur at lower levels of activated Ras. These findings have important implications for the contribution of activated Ras to oncogenesis and for the conversion of TGF-β from an inhibitory to a metastatic factor in some epithelial tumors.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank A. Burgess for the Raf-1 RBD plasmid, C. J. Der and A. D. Cox for expression vectors for N-Ras61K effector loop mutants and Rlf-CAAX, L. A. Feig for the Ral28N construct, J. Kato for the murine p27 construct, and M. Pagano for the human HA-p27 construct. The expert assistance of Orit Gutman is gratefully acknowledged.
This work was supported by grants from the Israel Science Foundation (grant 414/01) and the Israel Cancer Research Fund (to Y.I.H). Y.K. is an incumbent of the Jack H. Skirball Chair in Applied Neurobiology. Y.I.H. is an incumbent of the Zalman Weinberg Chair in Cell Biology.