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1.
The Bcl2/adenovirus E1B 19-kDa interacting protein 3 (Bnip3) is an atypical BH3-only protein that is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. Bnip3 is also a potent inducer of mitochondrial autophagy, and in this study we have investigated the mechanisms by which Bnip3 induces autophagy in cardiac myocytes. We found that Bnip3 induced mitochondrial translocation of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), a protein involved in mitochondrial fission in adult myocytes. Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission correlated with increased autophagy, and inhibition of Drp1 reduced Bnip3-mediated autophagy. Overexpression of Drp1K38E, a dominant negative of Drp1, or mitofusin 1 prevented mitochondrial fission and autophagy by Bnip3. Also, inhibition of mitochondrial fission or autophagy resulted in increased death of myocytes overexpressing Bnip3. Moreover, Bnip3 promoted translocation of the E3 ubiquitin ligase Parkin to mitochondria, which was prevented in the presence of a Drp1 inhibitor. Interestingly, induction of autophagy by Bnip3 was reduced in Parkin-deficient myocytes. Thus our data suggest that induction of autophagy in response to Bnip3 is a protective response activated by the cell that involves Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission and recruitment of Parkin.  相似文献   

2.
《Autophagy》2013,9(7):855-862
Bnip3 is a pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein which is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. Bnip3 is also a potent inducer of autophagy in many cells. In this study, we have investigated the mechanism by which Bnip3 induces autophagy in adult cardiac myocytes. Overexpression of Bnip3 induced extensive autophagy in adult cardiac myocytes. Fluorescent microscopy studies and ultrastructural analysis revealed selective degradation of mitochondria by autophagy in myocytes overexpressing Bnip3. Oxidative stress and increased levels of intracellular Ca2+ have been reported by others to induce autophagy, but Bnip3-induced autophagy was not abolished by antioxidant treatment or the Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM. We also investigated the role of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) in Bnip3-induced autophagy. Although the mPTP has previously been implicated in the induction of autophagy and selective removal of damaged mitochondria by autophagosomes, mitochondria sequestered by autophagosomes in Bnip3-treated cardiac myocytes had not undergone permeability transition, and treatment with the mPTP inhibitor cyclosporine A did not inhibit mitochondrial autophagy in cardiac myocytes. Moreover, cyclophilin D (cypD) is an essential component of the mPTP and Bnip3 induced autophagy to the same extent in embryonic fibroblasts isolated from wild-type and cypD-deficient mice. These results support a model where Bnip3 induces selective removal of the mitochondria in cardiac myocytes, and that Bnip3 triggers induction of autophagy independent of Ca2+, ROS generation, and mPTP opening.  相似文献   

3.
Ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) injury is associated with extensive loss of cardiac myocytes. Bnip3 is a mitochondrial pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 protein which is expressed in the adult myocardium. To investigate if Bnip3 plays a role in I/R injury, we generated a TAT-fusion protein encoding the carboxyl terminal transmembrane deletion mutant of Bnip3 (TAT-Bnip3DeltaTM) which has been shown to act as a dominant negative to block Bnip3-induced cell death. Perfusion with TAT-Bnip3DeltaTM conferred protection against I/R injury, improved cardiac function, and protected mitochondrial integrity. Moreover, Bnip3 induced extensive fragmentation of the mitochondrial network and increased autophagy in HL-1 myocytes. 3D rendering of confocal images revealed fragmented mitochondria inside autophagosomes. Enhancement of autophagy by ATG5 protected against Bnip3-mediated cell death, whereas inhibition of autophagy by ATG5K130R enhanced cell death. These results suggest that Bnip3 contributes to I/R injury which triggers a protective stress response with upregulation of autophagy and removal of damaged mitochondria.  相似文献   

4.
Bnip3 is a pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein which is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. Bnip3 is also a potent inducer of autophagy in many cells. In this study, we have investigated the mechanism by which Bnip3 induces autophagy in adult cardiac myocytes. Overexpression of Bnip3 induced extensive autophagy in adult cardiac myocytes. Fluorescent microscopy studies and ultrastructural analysis revealed selective degradation of mitochondria by autophagy in myocytes overexpressing Bnip3. Oxidative stress and increased levels of intracellular Ca2+ have been reported by others to induce autophagy, but Bnip3-induced autophagy was not abolished by antioxidant treatment or the Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM. We also investigated the role of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) in Bnip3-induced autophagy. Although the mPTP has previously been implicated in the induction of autophagy and selective removal of damaged mitochondria by autophagosomes, mitochondria sequestered by autophagosomes in Bnip3-treated cardiac myocytes had not undergone permeability transition and treatment with the mPTP inhibitor cyclosporine A did not inhibit mitochondrial autophagy in cardiac myocytes. Moreover, cyclophilin D (cypD) is an essential component of the mPTP and Bnip3 induced autophagy to the same extent in embryonic fibroblasts isolated from wild-type and cypD-deficient mice. These results support a model where Bnip3 induces selective removal of the mitochondria in cardiac myocytes and that Bnip3 triggers induction of autophagy independent of Ca2+, ROS generation and mPTP opening.Key words: Bnip3, autophagy, cardiac myocytes, mitochondria, permeability transition pore, cyclophilin D  相似文献   

5.
Autophagy plays an important role in cellular quality control and is responsible for removing protein aggregates and dysfunctional organelles. Bnip3 is an atypical BH3-only protein that is known to cause mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. Interestingly, Bnip3 can also protect against cell death by inducing mitochondrial autophagy. The mechanism for this process, however, remains poorly understood. Bnip3 contains a C-terminal transmembrane domain that is essential for homodimerization and proapoptotic function. In this study, we show that homodimerization of Bnip3 is also a requirement for induction of autophagy. Several Bnip3 mutants that do not interfere with its mitochondrial localization but disrupt homodimerization failed to induce autophagy in cells. In addition, we discovered that endogenous Bnip3 is localized to both mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To investigate the effects of Bnip3 at mitochondria or the ER on autophagy, Bnip3 was targeted specifically to each organelle by substituting the Bnip3 transmembrane domain with that of Acta or cytochrome b(5). We found that Bnip3 enhanced autophagy in cells from both sites. We also discovered that Bnip3 induced removal of both ER (ERphagy) and mitochondria (mitophagy) via autophagy. The clearance of these organelles was mediated in part via binding of Bnip3 to LC3 on the autophagosome. Although ablation of the Bnip3-LC3 interaction by mutating the LC3 binding site did not impair the prodeath activity of Bnip3, it significantly reduced both mitophagy and ERphagy. Our data indicate that Bnip3 regulates the apoptotic balance as an autophagy receptor that induces removal of both mitochondria and ER.  相似文献   

6.
During apoptosis the pro-death Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bak induce mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) to mediate cell death. Recently, it was shown that Bax and Bak are also required for mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP)-dependent necrosis, where, in their non-oligomeric state, they enhance permeability characteristics of the outer mitochondrial membrane. Necroptosis is another form of regulated necrosis involving the death receptors and receptor interacting protein kinases (RIP proteins, by Ripk genes). Here, we show cells or mice deficient for Bax/Bak or cyclophilin D, a protein that regulates MPTP opening, are resistant to cell death induced by necroptotic mediators. We show that Bax/Bak oligomerization is required for necroptotic cell death and that this oligomerization reinforces MPTP opening. Mechanistically, we observe mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) protein and cofilin-1 translocation to the mitochondria following necroptosis induction, while expression of the mitochondrial matrix isoform of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family member, myeloid cell leukemia 1 (Mcl-1), is significantly reduced. Some of these effects are lost with necroptosis inhibition in Bax/Bak1 double null, Ppif-/-, or Ripk3-/- fibroblasts. Hence, downstream mechanisms of cell death induced by necroptotic stimuli utilize both Bax/Bak to generate apoptotic pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane as well as MPTP opening in association with known mitochondrial death modifying proteins.  相似文献   

7.
We recently demonstrated that resveratrol induces caspase-dependent apoptosis in multiple cancer cell types. Whether apoptosis is also regulated by other cell death mechanisms such as autophagy is not clearly defined. Here we show that inhibition of autophagy enhanced resveratrol-induced caspase activation and apoptosis. Resveratrol inhibited colony formation and cell proliferation in multiple cancer cell types. Resveratrol treatment induced accumulation of LC3-II, which is a key marker for autophagy. Pretreatment with 3-methyladenine (3-MA), an autophagy inhibitor, increased resveratrol-mediated caspase activation and cell death in breast and colon cancer cells. Inhibition of autophagy by silencing key autophagy regulators such as ATG5 and Beclin-1 enhanced resveratrol-induced caspase activation. Mechanistic analysis revealed that Beclin-1 did not interact with proapoptotic proteins Bax and Bak; however, Beclin-1 was found to interact with p53 in the cytosol and mitochondria upon resveratrol treatment. Importantly, resveratrol depleted ATPase 8 gene, and thus, reduced mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) content, suggesting that resveratrol induces damage to mtDNA causing accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria triggering autophagy induction. Together, our findings indicate that induction of autophagy during resveratrol-induced apoptosis is an adaptive response.  相似文献   

8.
The Bcl-2 proteins Bax and Bak can permeabilize the outer mitochondrial membrane and commit cells to apoptosis. Pro-survival Bcl-2 proteins control Bax by constant retrotranslocation into the cytosol of healthy cells. The stabilization of cytosolic Bax raises the question whether the functionally redundant but largely mitochondrial Bak shares this level of regulation. Here we report that Bak is retrotranslocated from the mitochondria by pro-survival Bcl-2 proteins. Bak is present in the cytosol of human cells and tissues, but low shuttling rates cause predominant mitochondrial Bak localization. Interchanging the membrane anchors of Bax and Bak reverses their subcellular localization compared to the wild-type proteins. Strikingly, the reduction of Bax shuttling to the level of Bak retrotranslocation results in full Bax toxicity even in absence of apoptosis induction. Thus, fast Bax retrotranslocation is required to protect cells from commitment to programmed death.  相似文献   

9.
The Bcl-2 proteins are best known as regulators of the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. However, recent studies have demonstrated that they can also regulate autophagy. For many years, autophagy was considered to be a nonselective process where the autophagosomes randomly sequestered contents in the cytosol to supply the cells with amino acids and fatty acids during nutrient deprivation. However, it is now clear that autophagy is important for cellular homeostasis under normal conditions, and that it can be a selective process where specific protein aggregates or organelles, such as mitochondria, are targeted for removal by the autophagosomes. Removal of damaged mitochondria is essential for cellular survival, and defects in this process lead to accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria and cell death. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the selective removal of mitochondria in cells is still poorly understood. A recent study from our laboratory demonstrates that the BH3-only protein Bnip3 is a specific activator of mitochondrial autophagy (mitophagy) and that this process is independent of its role in apoptotic signaling. Here, we discuss how Bnip3-mediated impairment of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation facilitates mitochondrial turnover via autophagy in the absence of permeabilization of the mitochondrial membrane and apoptosis.  相似文献   

10.
《Autophagy》2013,9(4):307-309
Bnip3 is a member of the ‘BH3-only’ Bcl-2 subfamily which has been implicated in apoptotic, necrotic, and autophagic cell death. We recently reported that Bnip3 is a key mediator of mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death in the ex vivo heart following ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). Moreover, we found that Bnip3 was involved in upregulation of autophagy in I/R and that Bnip3-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction correlated with upregulation of autophagy. Using a model of simulated I/R and overexpression of Bnip3 in HL-1 cardiac myocytes, we determined that Bnip3-mediated upregulation of autophagic activity constituted a protective response against Bnip3 death signaling. Here we present additional evidence that enhanced autophagic activity functions as a cytoprotective pathway to oppose ischemia/reperfusion-related apoptosis.  相似文献   

11.
《Autophagy》2013,9(7):775-777
The Bcl-2 proteins are best known as regulators of the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. However, recent studies have demonstrated that they can also regulate autophagy. For many years, autophagy was considered to be a nonselective process where the autophagosomes randomly sequestered contents in the cytosol to supply the cells with amino acids and fatty acids during nutrient deprivation. However, it is now clear that autophagy is important for cellular homeostasis under normal conditions, and that it can be a selective process where specific protein aggregates or organelles, such as mitochondria, are targeted for removal by the autophagosomes. Removal of damaged mitochondria is essential for cellular survival, and defects in this process lead to accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria and cell death. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the selective removal of mitochondria in cells is still poorly understood. A recent study from our laboratory demonstrates that the BH3-only protein Bnip3 is a specific activator of mitochondrial autophagy (mitophagy) and that this process is independent of its role in apoptotic signaling. Here, we discuss how Bnip3-mediated impairment of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation facilitates mitochondrial turnover via autophagy in the absence of permeabilization of the mitochondrial membrane and apoptosis.  相似文献   

12.
Bnip3 is a member of the 'BH3-only' Bcl-2 subfamily which has been implicated in apoptotic,(1) necrotic(2) and autophagic cell death.(3,4) We recently reported that Bnip3 is a key mediator of mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death in the ex vivo heart following ischemia/reperfusion (I/R).(5) Moreover, we found that Bnip3 was involved in upregulation of autophagy in I/R and that Bnip3-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction correlated with upregulation of autophagy. Using a model of simulated I/R and overexpression of Bnip3 in HL-1 cardiac myocytes, we determined that Bnip3-mediated upregulation of autophagic activity constituted a protective response against Bnip3 death signaling. Here we present additional evidence that enhanced autophagic activity functions as a cytoprotective pathway to oppose ischemia/reperfusion-related apoptosis.  相似文献   

13.
Despite extensive investigation, the molecular mechanism of anticancer activity of sphingolipid metabolites remains to be clarified. Here we demonstrate that sphingosine induces mitochondrial cell death via Lck-mediated conformational activation of Bak in Jurkat T cell lymphoma. Treatment of cells with sphingosine rapidly induced mitochondrial membrane potential loss, cytochrome c release from mitochondria, and apoptotic cell death. Sphingosine also induced conformational activation of Bak, but not Bax. siRNA targeting of Bak effectively attenuated sphingosine-induced mitochondrial cell death, indicating that Bak is involved in sphingosine-induced mitochondrial cell death. Sphingosine also induced activation of tyrosine kinase Lck. Inhibition of Lck by treatment of PP2, a Lck inhibitor or siRNA targeting of Lck suppressed sphingosine-induced conformational activation and oligomerization of Bak, mitochondrial membrane potential loss, and apoptotic cell death, implying that activation of Lck is critically required for sphingosine-induced conformational activation of Bak and mitochondrial cell death. The results elucidated in this study provide a novel cellular mechanism for the anticancer activity of sphingolipid metabolites.  相似文献   

14.
Polyphenol phytoalexin (resveratrol), found in grapes and red wine is a strong chemopreventive agent with promising safety records with human consumption and unique forms of cell death induction in a variety of tumor cells. However, the mechanism of resveratrol-induced apoptosis upstream of mitochondria is still not defined. The results from this study suggest that caspase-2 activation occurs upstream of mitochondria in resveratrol-treated cells. The upstream activation of caspase-2 is not dependent on its antioxidant property or NF-kappaB inhibition. The activated caspase-2 triggers mitochondrial apoptotic events by inducing conformational changes in Bax/Bak with subsequent release of cytochrome c, apoptosis-inducing factor, and endonuclease G. Caspase-8 activation seems to be independent of these events and does not appear to be mediated by classical death receptor processing or downstream caspases. Both caspase-2 and caspase-8 contribute toward the mitochondrial translocation of Bid, since neither caspase-8 inhibition nor caspase-2 inhibition could prevent translocation of Bid DsRed into mitochondria. Caspase-2 inhibitors or antisense silencing of caspase-2 prevented cell death induced by resveratrol and partially prevented processing of downstream caspases, including caspase-9, caspase-3, and caspase-8. Studies using mouse embryonic fibroblasts deficient for both Bax and Bak indicate the contribution of both Bax and Bak in mediating cell death induced by resveratrol and the existence of Bax/Bak-independent cell death possibly through caspase-8- or caspase-2-mediated mitochondria-independent downstream caspase processing.  相似文献   

15.
Moretti L  Attia A  Kim KW  Lu B 《Autophagy》2007,3(2):142-144
Bax and Bak, act as a gateway for caspase-mediated cell death. mTOR, an Akt downstream effector, plays a critical role in cell proliferation, growth and survival. The inhibition of mTOR induces autophagy, whereas apoptosis is a minor cell death mechanism in irradiated solid tumors. We explored possible alternative pathways for cell death induced by radiation in Bax/Bak-/- double knockout (DKO) MEF cells and wild-type cells, and we compared the cell survival: the Bax/Bak-/- cells were more radiosensitive than the wild-type cells. The irradiated cells displayed an increase in the pro-autophagic proteins ATG5-ATG12 and Beclin-1. These results are surprising in the fact that the inhibition of apoptosis resulted in increasing radiosensitivity; indicating that perhaps autophagy is the cornerstone in the cell radiation sensitivity regulation. Furthermore, irradiation upregulates autophagic programmed cell death in cells that are unable to undergo Bax/Bak-mediated apoptosis. We hypothesize the presence of a phosphatase-possibly PTEN, an Akt/mTOR negative regulator that can be inhibited by Bax/Bak. This fits with our hypothesis of Bax/Bak as a downregulator of autophagy. We are currently conducting experiments to explore the relationship between apoptosis and autophagy. Future directions in research include strategies targeting Bax/Bak in cancer xenografts and exploring novel radiosensitizers targeting autophagy pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Calcium (Ca2+) signals are involved in important checkpoints in cell death pathways and promote both apoptosis and autophagy. However, the relationship between autophagy and apoptosis in response to Ca2+ level elevation is poorly understood. Here, we provided evidence that the influx of extracellular Ca2+ triggered by Trichokonin VI (TK VI), an antimicrobial peptide, induced calpain-dependent apoptosis and autophagy in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. Remarkably, TK VI preferentially induced apoptosis that was associated with calpain-mediated Bax and Atg5 cleavage, which resulted in the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential and cytochrome c release. Interestingly, truncated, but not full-length Atg5, associated with Bcl-xL and promoted the intrinsic pathway. Moreover, TK VI treatment induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, an effect in which Bak might play a major role. This accumulation of ROS resulted in the subsequent disposal of damaged mitochondria within autophagosomes via Atg5-mediated and mitochondria-selective autophagy. Both the inhibition of calpain activity and Bax deficiency activated a switch that promoted an enhancement of autophagy. The inhibition of both apoptosis and autophagy significantly attenuated the TK VI cytotoxicity, indicating that the two processes had stimulatory effects during TK VI-meditated cell death. These results suggested that calpain, Bak and Atg5 were molecular links between autophagy and apoptosis and revealed novel aspects of the crosstalk between these two processes. The potential of TK VI is proposed as a promising anticancer agent for its well-characterized activity of Ca2+ agonist and as a possible novel therapeutic strategy that acts on cancer cell mitochondria.  相似文献   

17.
Release of apoptogenic proteins such as cytochrome c from mitochondria is regulated by pro- and anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins, with pro-apoptotic BH3-only proteins activating Bax and Bak. Current models assume that apoptosis induction occurs via the binding and inactivation of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins by BH3-only proteins or by direct binding to Bax. Here, we analyze apoptosis induction by the BH3-only protein Bim(S). Regulated expression of Bim(S) in epithelial cells was followed by its rapid mitochondrial translocation and mitochondrial membrane insertion in the absence of detectable binding to anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins. This caused mitochondrial recruitment and activation of Bax and apoptosis. Mutational analysis of Bim(S) showed that mitochondrial targeting, but not binding to Bcl-2 or Mcl-1, was required for apoptosis induction. In yeast, Bim(S) enhanced the killing activity of Bax in the absence of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins. Thus, cell death induction by a BH3-only protein can occur through a process that is independent of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins but requires mitochondrial targeting.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-mediated death signaling induces oligomerization of proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bax into a high molecular mass protein complex in mitochondrial membranes. Bax complex formation is associated with the release of cytochrome c, which propagates death signaling by acting as a cofactor for caspase-9 activation. The adenovirus Bcl-2 homologue E1B 19K blocks TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis by preventing cytochrome c release, caspase-9 activation, and apoptosis of virus-infected cells. TNF-alpha induces E1B 19K-Bax interaction and inhibits Bax oligomerization. Oligomerized Bax may form a pore to release mitochondrial proteins, analogous to the homologous pore-forming domains of bacterial toxins. E1B 19K can also bind to proapoptotic Bak, but the functional significance is not known. TNF-alpha signaling induced Bak-Bax interaction and both Bak and Bax oligomerization. E1B 19K was constitutively in a complex with Bak, and blocked the Bak-Bax interaction and oligomerization of both. The TNF-alpha-mediated cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO release from mitochondria was inhibited by E1B 19K expression in adenovirus-infected cells. Since either Bax or Bak is essential for death signaling by TNF-alpha, the interaction between E1B 19K and both Bak and Bax may be required to inhibit their cooperative or independent oligomerization to release proteins from mitochondria which promote caspase activation and cell death.  相似文献   

20.
In the present study a clonal Jurkat cell line deficient in expression of Bak was used to analyze the role of Bak in cytochrome c release from mitochondria. The Bak-deficient T leukemic cells were resistant to apoptosis induced by UV, staurosporin, VP-16, bleomycin, or cisplatin. In contrast to wild type Jurkat cells, these Bak-deficient cells did not respond to UV or treatment with these anticancer drugs by membranous phosphatidylserine exposure, DNA breaks, activation of caspases, or release of mitochondrial cytochrome c. The block in the apoptotic cascade was in the mitochondrial mechanism for cytochrome c release because purified mitochondria from Bak-deficient cells failed to release cytochrome c or apoptosis-inducing factor in response to recombinant Bax or truncated Bid. The resistance of Bak-deficient cells to VP-16 was reversed by transduction of the Bak gene into these cells. Also, the cytochrome c releasing capability of the Bak-deficient mitochondria was restored by insertion of recombinant Bak protein into purified mitochondria. Following mitochondrial localization, low dose recombinant Bak restored the mitochondrial release of cytochrome c in response to Bax; at increased doses it induced cytochrome c release itself. The function of Bak is independent of Bid and Bax because recombinant Bak induced cytochrome c release from mitochondria purified from Bax(-/-), Bid(-/-), or Bid(-/-) Bax(-/-) mice. Together, our findings suggest that Bak plays a key role in the apoptotic machinery of cytochrome c release and thus in the chemoresistance of human T leukemic cells.  相似文献   

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