4.6 Article

Acid sphingomyelinase is indispensable for UV light-induced bax conformational change at the mitochondrial membrane

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 280, Issue 21, Pages 20804-20813

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M410869200

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Ultraviolet light-induced apoptosis can be caused by DNA damage but also involves immediate-early cell death cascades characteristic of death receptor signaling. Here we show that the UV light-induced apoptotic signaling pathway is unique, targeting Bax activation at the mitochondrial membrane independent of caspase-8 or cathepsin D activity. Cells deficient in acid sphingomyelinase (ASMase) do not show UV light-induced Bax activation, cytochrome c release, or apoptosis. In ASMase-deficient cells, the apoptotic UV light response is restored by stable or transient expression of human ASMase. Bax conformational change in ASMase(-/-) cells is also caused by synthetic C-16-ceramide acting on intact cells or isolated mitochondria. The results suggest that UV light-triggered ASMase activation is essentially required for Bax conformational change leading to mitochondrial release of pro-apoptotic factors like cytochrome c and Smac.

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