Cytochrome c acts as a cardiolipin oxygenase required for release of proapoptotic factors |
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Authors: | Kagan Valerian E Tyurin Vladimir A Jiang Jianfei Tyurina Yulia Y Ritov Vladimir B Amoscato Andrew A Osipov Anatoly N Belikova Natalia A Kapralov Alexandr A Kini Vidisha Vlasova Irina I Zhao Qing Zou Meimei Di Peter Svistunenko Dimitry A Kurnikov Igor V Borisenko Gregory G |
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Affiliation: | Center for Free Radical and Antioxidant Health and Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260, USA. vkagan@eoh.pitt.edu |
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Abstract: | Programmed death (apoptosis) is turned on in damaged or unwanted cells to secure their clean and safe self-elimination. The initial apoptotic events are coordinated in mitochondria, whereby several proapoptotic factors, including cytochrome c, are released into the cytosol to trigger caspase cascades. The release mechanisms include interactions of B-cell/lymphoma 2 family proteins with a mitochondria-specific phospholipid, cardiolipin, to cause permeabilization of the outer mitochondrial membrane. Using oxidative lipidomics, we showed that cardiolipin is the only phospholipid in mitochondria that undergoes early oxidation during apoptosis. The oxidation is catalyzed by a cardiolipin-specific peroxidase activity of cardiolipin-bound cytochrome c. In a previously undescribed step in apoptosis, we showed that oxidized cardiolipin is required for the release of proapoptotic factors. These results provide insight into the role of reactive oxygen species in triggering the cell-death pathway and describe an early role for cytochrome c before caspase activation. |
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