ohely-bidchimerasindicate-2015.pdf (1.52 MB)
Download fileBid chimeras indicate that most BH3-only proteins can directly activate Bak and Bax, and show no preference for Bak versus Bax
journal contribution
posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Hockings, K Anwari, R L Ninnis, J Brouwer, Martin O'HelyMartin O'Hely, M Evangelista, M G Hinds, P E Czabotar, E F Lee, W D Fairlie, G Dewson, R M KluckThe mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis is initiated by Bcl-2 homology region 3 (BH3)-only members of the Bcl-2 protein family. On upregulation or activation, certain BH3-only proteins can directly bind and activate Bak and Bax to induce conformation change, oligomerization and pore formation in mitochondria. BH3-only proteins, with the exception of Bid, are intrinsically disordered and therefore, functional studies often utilize peptides based on just their BH3 domains. However, these reagents do not possess the hydrophobic membrane targeting domains found on the native BH3-only molecule. To generate each BH3-only protein as a recombinant protein that could efficiently target mitochondria, we developed recombinant Bid chimeras in which the BH3 domain was replaced with that of other BH3-only proteins (Bim, Puma, Noxa, Bad, Bmf, Bik and Hrk). The chimeras were stable following purification, and each immunoprecipitated with full-length Bcl-xL according to the specificity reported for the related BH3 peptide. When tested for activation of Bak and Bax in mitochondrial permeabilization assays, Bid chimeras were ~1000-fold more effective than the related BH3 peptides. BH3 sequences from Bid and Bim were the strongest activators, followed by Puma, Hrk, Bmf and Bik, while Bad and Noxa were not activators. Notably, chimeras and peptides showed no apparent preference for activating Bak or Bax. In addition, within the BH3 domain, the h0 position recently found to be important for Bax activation, was important also for Bak activation. Together, our data with full-length proteins indicate that most BH3-only proteins can directly activate both Bak and Bax.
History
Journal
Cell death and diseaseVolume
6Article number
e1735Pagination
1 - 8Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupLocation
London, Eng.Publisher DOI
eISSN
2041-4889Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal articleCopyright notice
2015, Macmillan PublishersUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
Amino Acid SequenceAnimalsApoptosisBH3 Interacting Domain Death Agonist ProteinHumansMiceMice, Inbred C57BLMice, KnockoutMitochondriaMitochondrial MembranesMolecular Sequence DataOncogene Proteins, FusionPeptide FragmentsProto-Oncogene ProteinsProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2Substrate Specificitybcl-2 Homologous Antagonist-Killer Proteinbcl-2-Associated X Proteinbcl-X ProteinScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineCell BiologyPROSURVIVAL BCL-2 PROTEINSCYTOCHROME-C RELEASEBH3 DOMAINSMEMBRANE PERMEABILIZATIONCELL-DEATHMITOCHONDRIAL-MEMBRANEAPOPTOTIC FUNCTIONFAMILYBINDINGLIGAND