[PDF][PDF] RAS proteins and their regulators in human disease

DK Simanshu, DV Nissley, F McCormick - Cell, 2017 - cell.com
Cell, 2017cell.com
RAS proteins are binary switches, cycling between ON and OFF states during signal
transduction. These switches are normally tightly controlled, but in RAS-related diseases,
such as cancer, RASopathies, and many psychiatric disorders, mutations in the RAS genes
or their regulators render RAS proteins persistently active. The structural basis of the switch
and many of the pathways that RAS controls are well known, but the precise mechanisms by
which RAS proteins function are less clear. All RAS biology occurs in membranes: a precise …
RAS proteins are binary switches, cycling between ON and OFF states during signal transduction. These switches are normally tightly controlled, but in RAS-related diseases, such as cancer, RASopathies, and many psychiatric disorders, mutations in the RAS genes or their regulators render RAS proteins persistently active. The structural basis of the switch and many of the pathways that RAS controls are well known, but the precise mechanisms by which RAS proteins function are less clear. All RAS biology occurs in membranes: a precise understanding of RAS' interaction with membranes is essential to understand RAS action and to intervene in RAS-driven diseases.
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