4.8 Article

Suppression of CED-3-independent apoptosis by mitochondrial βNAC in Caenorhabditis elegans

Journal

NATURE
Volume 424, Issue 6952, Pages 1066-1071

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature01920

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To ensure cell survival, it is essential that the ubiquitous proapoptotic machinery is kept quiescent. As death is irreversible, cells must continually integrate developmental information with regulatory inputs to control the switch between repressing and activating apoptosis. Inappropriate activation or suppression of apoptosis can lead to degenerative pathologies(1) or tumorigenesis(2), respectively. Here we report that Caenorhabditis elegans inhibitor of cell death-1 (ICD-1) is necessary and sufficient to prevent apoptosis. Loss of ICD-1 leads to inappropriate apoptosis in developing and differentiated cells in various tissues. Although this apoptosis requires CED-4, it occurs independently of CED-3-the caspase essential for developmental apoptosis(3) showing that these core pro-apoptotic proteins have separable roles. Overexpressing ICD-1 inhibits the apoptosis of cells that are normally programmed to die. ICD-1 is the beta-subunit of the nascent polypeptide-associated complex (bNAC) and contains a putative caspase-cleavage site and caspase recruitment domain. It localizes primarily to mitochondria, underscoring the role of mitochondria in coordinating apoptosis(4). Human bNAC is a caspase substrate that is rapidly eliminated in dying cells(5,6), suggesting that ICD-1 apoptosis-suppressing activity may be inactivated by caspases.

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