Farnesylated and methylated KRAS4b: high yield production of protein suitable for biophysical studies of prenylated protein-lipid interactions

William Gillette(Leidos (United States)), Dominic Esposito(Leidos (United States)), Maria Abreu Blanco(Leidos (United States)), Patrick Alexander(Leidos (United States)), Lakshman Bindu(Leidos (United States)), Cammi Bittner(Leidos (United States)), Oleg Chertov(Leidos (United States)), Peter Frank(Leidos (United States)), Carissa Grose(Leidos (United States)), Jane Jones(Leidos (United States)), Zhaojing Meng(Leidos (United States)), Shelley Perkins(Leidos (United States)), Que N. Van(Leidos (United States)), Rodolfo Ghirlando(National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases), Matthew J. Fivash(Data Management Services (United States)), Dwight V. Nissley(Leidos (United States)), Frank McCormick(Leidos (United States)), Matthew Holderfield(Leidos (United States)), Andrew G. Stephen(Leidos (United States))
Scientific Reports
November 2, 2015
Cited by 81Open Access
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Abstract

Prenylated proteins play key roles in several human diseases including cancer, atherosclerosis and Alzheimer's disease. KRAS4b, which is frequently mutated in pancreatic, colon and lung cancers, is processed by farnesylation, proteolytic cleavage and carboxymethylation at the C-terminus. Plasma membrane localization of KRAS4b requires this processing as does KRAS4b-dependent RAF kinase activation. Previous attempts to produce modified KRAS have relied on protein engineering approaches or in vitro farnesylation of bacterially expressed KRAS protein. The proteins produced by these methods do not accurately replicate the mature KRAS protein found in mammalian cells and the protein yield is typically low. We describe a protocol that yields 5-10 mg/L highly purified, farnesylated, and methylated KRAS4b from insect cells. Farnesylated and methylated KRAS4b is fully active in hydrolyzing GTP, binds RAF-RBD on lipid Nanodiscs and interacts with the known farnesyl-binding protein PDEδ.


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