Nature Publishing Group, publisher of Nature, and other science journals and reference works NATURE.COM NATURE NEWS NATUREJOBS NATUREEVENTS ABOUT NPG
Help Nature.com site index  
Oncogene
SEARCH     advanced search my account e-alerts subscribe register
Journal home
Advance online publication
Current issue
Archive
Press releases
For authors
For referees
Contact editorial office
About the journal
For librarians
Subscribe
Advertising
naturereprints
Contact NPG
Customer services
Site features
NPG Subject areas
Access material from all our publications in your subject area:
Biotechnology Biotechnology
Cancer Cancer
Chemistry Chemistry
Dentistry Dentistry
Development Development
Drug Discovery Drug Discovery
Earth Sciences Earth Sciences
Evolution & Ecology Evolution & Ecology
Genetics Genetics
Immunology Immunology
Materials Materials Science
Medical Research Medical Research
Microbiology Microbiology
Molecular Cell Biology Molecular Cell Biology
Neuroscience Neuroscience
Pharmacology Pharmacology
Physics Physics
Browse all publications
 
2 October 1997, Volume 15, Number 14, Pages 1689-1697
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Article  PDF
Article
An activated mutant of R-Ras inhibits cell death caused by cytokine deprivation in BaF3 cells in the presence of IGF-I
Jotaro Suzuki, Yoshito Kaziro and Hiroshi Koidea

Faculty of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Nagatsuta, Midori-ku, Yokohama, Japan

aAuthor for correspondence

Abstract

R-Ras belongs to a family of low molecular weight GTP-binding proteins and exhibits 55% amino acid identity to H-Ras. It has been demonstrated that H-Ras inhibits cell death caused by interleukin-3 (IL-3) withdrawal in BaF3 cells (Kinoshita et al. (1995b); Terada et al. (1995)). In the present study, we examined whether R-Ras also rescues BaF3 cells from the factor-deprived cell death. To do this, several BaF3 transfectants were established, in which expression of wild-type as well as mutant R-Ras was regulated by an inducible promoter. Using these transfectants, we found that expression of an activated R-Ras mutant, R-Ras (Q87L), suppressed the death of IL-3-deprived BaF3 cells. On the other hand, expression of the wild-type and the dominant-negative mutant of R-Ras showed no inhibitory effect on cell death, indicating that R-Ras·GTP abrogated cell death caused by deprivation of IL-3. Furthermore, it was found that IGF-I in serum was required for the anti-apoptotic activity of R-Ras. Suppression of cell death by R-Ras(Q87L) was inhibited by wortmannin, LY294002 (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitors), or PD98059 (inhibitor for MEK, a specific activator of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)). In addition, we have shown that, in HEK293 cells, R-Ras and IGF-I could activate MAPK synergistically. Also, PI3K activity was co-immunoprecipitated with an activated mutant of R-Ras. These results suggest that R-Ras in collaboration with IGF-I suppressed apoptotic cell death of BaF3 caused by IL-3 deprivation, presumably by modulating the activitites of MAPK and PI3K.

Keywords

R-Ras; apoptosis; PI3K; MAPK; IGF-I; Ras

Received 12 April 1999; revised 4 June 1999; accepted 4 June 1999
2 October 1997, Volume 15, Number 14, Pages 1689-1697
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Article  PDF
Privacy Policy © 1997 Nature Publishing Group