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Molecular biology of Bax and Bak activation and action

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2010.12.019

Keywords

Apoptosis; Bak; Bax; Conformation change; Mitochondrion; Mitochondrial permeability; Oligomerization

Funding

  1. Victorian Cancer Council
  2. NHMRC
  3. NHMRC, Australian Research Council
  4. Association for International Cancer Research
  5. German Research Foundation
  6. Worldwide Cancer Research [10-0230] Funding Source: researchfish

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Bax and Bak are two nuclear-encoded proteins present in higher eukaryotes that are able to pierce the mitochondrial outer membrane to mediate cell death by apoptosis. Thus, organelles recruited by nucleated cells to supply energy can be recruited by Bax and Bak to kill cells. The two proteins lie in wait in healthy cells where they adopt a globular alpha-helical structure, seemingly as monomers. Following a variety of stress signals, they convert into pore-forming proteins by changing conformation and assembling into oligomeric complexes in the mitochondrial outer membrane. Proteins from the mitochondrial intermembrane space then empty into the cytosol to activate proteases that dismantle the cell. The arrangement of Bax and Bak in membrane-bound complexes, and how the complexes porate the membrane, is far from being understood. However, recent data indicate that they first form symmetric BH3:groove dimers which can be linked via an interface between the alpha 6-helices to form high order oligomers. Here, we review how Bax and Bak change conformation and oligomerize, as well as how oligomers might form a pore. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Mitochondria: the deadly organelle. Crown Copyright (C) 2011 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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