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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Neurochemistry

Journal of Neurochemistry

Volume 84 Issue 1, Pages 196 - 207

Published Online: 13 Dec 2002

Journal compilation © 2010 International Society for Neurochemistry



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Two pathways for tBID-induced cytochrome c release from rat brain mitochondria: BAK- versus BAX-dependence
Nickolay Brustovetsky,* Janet M. Dubinsky,* Bruno Antonsson and Ronald Jemmerson
  *Department of Neuroscience and   Department of Microbiology and Center for Immunology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA   Serono Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Geneva, Switzerland
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr Ronald Jemmerson, Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, Mayo Mail Code 196, 420 Delaware St. S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. E-mail: ron@lenti.med.umn.edu
Copyright 2003 International Society for Neurochemistry
KEYWORDS
apoptosis • BAK • BAX • cytochrome c • permeability transition • tBID

Abstract

AbstractMaterials and methodsResultsDiscussionAcknowledgementsReferences

The mechanisms of truncated BID (tBID)-induced Cyt c release from non-synaptosomal brain mitochondria were examined. Addition of tBID to mitochondria induced partial Cyt c release which was inhibited by anti-BAK antibodies, implicating BAK. Immunoblotting showed the presence of BAK, but not BAX, in brain mitochondria. tBID did not release Cyt c from rat liver mitochondria, which lacked both BAX and BAK. This indicated that tBID did not act independently of BAX and BAK. tBID plus monomeric BAX produced twice as much Cyt c release as did tBID or oligomeric BAX alone. Neither tBID alone nor in combination with BAX induced mitochondrial swelling. In both cases Cyt c release was insensitive to cyclosporin A plus ADP, inhibitors of the mitochondrial permeability transition (mPT). Recombinant Bcl-xL inhibited Cyt c release induced by tBID alone or in combination with monomeric BAX. Koenig's polyanion, an inhibitor of VDAC, suppressed tBID-induced Cyt c release from brain mitochondria mediated by BAK but not by BAX. Thus, tBID can induce mPT-independent Cyt c release from brain mitochondria by interacting with exogenous BAX and/or with endogenous BAK that may involve VDAC. In contrast, neither adenylate kinase nor Smac/DIABLO was released from isolated rat brain mitochondria via BAK or BAX.


Received September 12, 2002; revised manuscript received October 23, 2002; accepted October 24, 2002.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1471-4159.2003.01545.x About DOI

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