Apoptin protein multimers form distinct higher-order nucleoprotein complexes with DNA
- 15 August 2003
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 31 (16) , 4805-4813
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkg661
Abstract
The chicken anaemia virus-derived protein apoptin is a tumour-specific cell-killing agent. It is biologically active as a highly stable, multimeric complex, consisting of 30-40 monomers. In tumour cells, but negligibly in normal cells, apoptin is imported into the nucleus prior to the induction of apoptosis. Immunoelectron microscopic data we report here indicate that apoptin predominantly co-localises with heterochromatin and nucleoli within tumour cells. Apoptin's preference for these DNA-dense nuclear bodies may be explained by our finding that apoptin cooperatively forms distinct superstructures with DNA in vitro. These superstructures do not grow beyond a diameter of approximately 200 nm, containing up to 20 multimeric apoptin complexes and approximately 3 kb of DNA. Furthermore, we show a single apoptin multimer to have eight independent, non-specific DNA-binding sites which preferentially bind strand ends, but which can also collaborate to bind longer stretches of DNA. Apoptin's high affinity for naked, undecorated double- and single-stranded DNA and for DNA fibre ends suggests that it may also capture such DNA in superstructures in vivo. Since these forms of DNA are predominantly found in transcriptionally active, replicating and damaged DNA, apoptin could be triggering apoptosis by interfering with DNA transcription and synthesis.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Importance of Nuclear Localization of Apoptin for Tumor-specific Induction of ApoptosisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- Recombinant apoptin multimers kill tumor cells but are nontoxic and epitope-shielded in a normal-cell-specific fashionExperimental Cell Research, 2003
- Apoptin Induces Tumor-specific Apoptosis as a Globular MultimerJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- A Tumor-specific Kinase Activity Regulates the Viral Death Protein ApoptinPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Fork Reversal and ssDNA Accumulation at Stalled Replication Forks Owing to Checkpoint DefectsScience, 2002
- Nuclear localization of DEDD leads to caspase-6 activation through its death effector domain and inhibition of RNA polymerase I dependent transcriptionCell Death & Differentiation, 2001
- Inhibition of DNA Replication and Induction of S Phase Cell Cycle Arrest by G-rich OligonucleotidesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- A Simple, High-Resolution Method for Establishing DNA Binding Affinity and Sequence SelectivityJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2001
- DNA methylation, chromatin inheritance, and cancerOncogene, 2001
- Target Detection Assay (TDA): a versatile procedure to determine DNA blinding sites as demonstrated on SP1 proteinNucleic Acids Research, 1990