3.8 Article

Abnormal intracellular localization of Bax with a normal membrane anchor domain in human lung cancer cell lines

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 91, Issue 12, Pages 1269-1277

Publisher

JAPANESE CANCER ASSOC
DOI: 10.1111/j.1349-7006.2000.tb00914.x

Keywords

Bax localization; BH3 domain; transmembrane segment

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Proapoptotic Bax is a member of the Bcl-2 family proteins, which have a key role in regulating programmed cell death. The intracellular localization and redistribution of Bax are important in promoting apoptosis. Bax contains a BH3 domain heterodimerizing with Bcl-2 and a hydrophobic transmembrane segment to be inserted in specified organelle membranes. In this study, Bcl-2 showed cytoplasmic localization in all of ten human lung cancer cell lines tested. Interestingly, Bax was localized in the nucleus in 7 cell lines, although Bax lacks nuclear import signals. This may allow cancer cells to escape from apoptosis. Why pax is able to exist in the nucleus is still unclear. We hypothesized that mutation in the BH3 domain and/or transmembrane segment of Bax possibly causes intracellular Bax distribution. We analyzed the sequence of the bax gene in these cell lines and found only a silent point mutation at codon 184 (TCG-->TCA) in the transmembrane segment in all cell lines. This finding indicates that changes in cellular localization of Bax in lung cancer cell lines do not depend on bax mutation and that Bax is possibly translocated into the nucleus without any mutation. This is the first report showing that Bax with the normal amino acid sequence can be localized in the nucleus in established lung cancer cell lines without any treatment of the cells.

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