Ras proteins are membrane-anchored
GTPases that regulate key cellular
signaling networks. It has been recently shown that different anionic
lipid types can affect the properties of Ras in terms of dimerization/clustering
on the cell membrane. To understand the effects of anionic lipids
on key spatiotemporal properties of dimeric K-Ras4B, we perform all-atom
molecular dynamics simulations of the dimer K-Ras4B in the presence
and absence of Raf[RBD/CRD] effectors on two model anionic lipid membranes:
one containing 78% mol DOPC, 20% mol DOPS, and 2% mol PIP2 and another
one with enhanced concentration of anionic lipids containing 50% mol
DOPC, 40% mol DOPS, and 10% mol PIP2. Analysis of our results unveils
the orientational space of dimeric K-Ras4B and shows that the stability
of the dimer is enhanced on the membrane containing a high concentration
of anionic lipids in the absence of Raf effectors. This enhanced stability
is also observed in the presence of Raf[RBD/CRD] effectors although
it is not influenced by the concentration of anionic lipids in the
membrane, but rather on the ability of Raf[CRD] to anchor to the membrane.
We generate dominant K-Ras4B conformations by Markov state modeling
and yield the population of states according to the K-Ras4B orientation
on the membrane. For the membrane containing anionic lipids, we observe
correlations between the diffusion of K-Ras4B and PIP2 and anchoring
of anionic lipids to the Raf[CRD] domain. We conclude that the presence
of effectors with the Raf[CRD] domain anchoring on the membrane as
well as the membrane composition both influence the conformational
stability of the K-Ras4B dimer, enabling the preservation of crucial
interface interactions