The human small GTPase, RhoA, expressed in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae is post-translationally processed and,
when co-expressed with its cytosolic inhibitory protein,
RhoGDI, spontaneously forms a heterodimer in vivo. The
RhoA/RhoGDI complex, purified to greater than 98% at high
yield from the yeast cytosolic fraction, could be stoichiometrically
ADP-ribosylated by Clostridium botulinum C3 exoenzyme,
contained stoichiometric GDP, and could be nucleotide exchanged
fully with [3H]GDP or partially with
GTP in the presence of submicromolar Mg2+. The
GTP-RhoA/RhoGDI complex hydrolyzed GTP with a rate constant
of 4.5 × 10−5 s−1,
considerably slower than free RhoA. Hydrolysis followed
pseudo-first-order kinetics indicating that the RhoA hydrolyzing
GTP was RhoGDI associated. The constitutively active G14V-RhoA
mutant expressed as a complex with RhoGDI and purified
without added nucleotide also bound stoichiometric guanine
nucleotide: 95% contained GDP and 5% GTP. Microinjection
of the GTP-bound G14V-RhoA/RhoGDI complex (but not the
GDP form) into serum-starved Swiss 3T3 cells elicited formation
of stress fibers and focal adhesions. In vitro, GTP-bound-RhoA
spontaneously translocated from its complex with RhoGDI
to liposomes, whereas GDP-RhoA did not. These results show
that GTP-triggered translocation of RhoA from RhoGDI to
a membrane, where it carries out its signaling function,
is an intrinsic property of the RhoA/RhoGDI complex that
does not require other protein factors or membrane receptors.