Cell Damage-induced Conformational Changes of the Pro-Apoptotic Protein Bak In Vivo Precede the Onset of Apoptosis
Open Access
- 8 March 1999
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 144 (5) , 903-914
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.144.5.903
Abstract
Investigation of events committing cells to death revealed that a concealed NH2-terminal epitope of the pro-apoptotic protein Bak became exposed in vivo before apoptosis. This occurred after treatment of human Jurkat or CEM-C7A T-lymphoma cells with the mechanistically disparate agents staurosporine, etoposide or dexamethasone. The rapid, up to 10-fold increase in Bak-associated immunofluorescence was measured with epitope-specific monoclonal antibodies using flow cytometry and microscopy. In contrast, using a polyclonal antibody to Bak, immunofluorescence was detected both before and after treatment. There were no differences in Bak protein content nor in subcellular location before or after treatment. Immunofluorescence showed Bcl-xL and Bak were largely associated with mitochondria and in untreated cells they coimmunoprecipitated in the presence of nonioinic detergent. This association was significantly decreased after cell perturbation suggesting that Bcl-xL dissociation from Bak occurred on exposure of Bak9s NH2 terminus. Multiple forms of Bak protein were observed by two dimensional electrophoresis but these were unchanged by inducers of apoptosis. This indicated that integration of cellular damage signals did not take place directly on the Bak protein. Release of proteins, including Bcl-xL, from Bak is suggested to be an important event in commitment to death.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anti-apoptotic oncogenes prevent caspase-dependent and independent commitment for cell deathCell Death & Differentiation, 1998
- Commitment to cell death measured by loss of clonogenicity is separable from the appearance of apoptotic markersCell Death & Differentiation, 1998
- Movement of Bax from the Cytosol to Mitochondria during ApoptosisThe Journal of cell biology, 1997
- v-Abl protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) mediated suppression of apoptosis is associated with the up-regulation of Bcl-XLOncogene, 1997
- Bak can accelerate chemotherapy-induced cell death independently of its heterodimerization with Bcl-XL and Bcl-2Oncogene, 1997
- Bax upregulation is an early event in cisplatin-induced apoptosis in human testicular germ-cell tumor cell line NT2, as quantitated by flow cytometryCytometry, 1997
- Structure of Bcl-x L -Bak Peptide Complex: Recognition Between Regulators of ApoptosisScience, 1997
- Bax-independent inhibition of apoptosis by Bcl-XLNature, 1996
- Bcl-2 heterodimerizes in vivo with a conserved homolog, Bax, that accelerates programed cell deathCell, 1993
- bcl-x, a bcl-2-related gene that functions as a dominant regulator of apoptotic cell deathCell, 1993