4.8 Article

Direct activation of full-length proapoptotic BAK

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1214313110

Keywords

apoptosis; BCL-2 family; SAHB; stapled peptide; photocrosslinking

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5R01CA050239, 5R01GM090299]
  2. Stand Up to Cancer Innovative Research Grant
  3. Lander Fellowship in Cancer Chemical Biology
  4. American Association of University Women International Fellowship

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Proapoptotic B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) antagonist/killer (BAK) and BCL-2-associated X (BAX) form toxic mitochondrial pores in response to cellular stress. Whereas BAX resides predominantly in the cytosol, BAK is constitutively localized to the outer mitochondrial membrane. Select BCL-2 homology domain 3 (BH3) helices activate BAX directly by engaging an alpha 1/alpha 6 trigger site. The inability to express full-length BAK has hampered full dissection of its activation mechanism. Here, we report the production of full-length, monomeric BAK by mutagenesis-based solubilization of its C-terminal alpha-helical surface. Recombinant BAK autotranslocates to mitochondria but only releases cytochrome c upon BH3 triggering. A direct activation mechanism was explicitly demonstrated using a liposomal system that recapitulates BAK-mediated release upon addition of BH3 ligands. Photoreactive BH3 helices mapped both triggering and autointeractions to the canonical BH3-binding pocket of BAK, whereas the same ligands crosslinked to the alpha 1/alpha 6 site of BAX. Thus, activation of both BAK and BAX is initiated by direct BH3-interaction but at distinct trigger sites. These structural and biochemical insights provide opportunities for developing proapoptotic agents that activate the death pathway through direct but differential engagement of BAK and BAX.

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