1. Academic Validation
  2. Exon skipping in Mcl-1 results in a bcl-2 homology domain 3 only gene product that promotes cell death

Exon skipping in Mcl-1 results in a bcl-2 homology domain 3 only gene product that promotes cell death

  • J Biol Chem. 2000 Jul 21;275(29):22136-46. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M909572199.
C D Bingle 1 R W Craig B M Swales V Singleton P Zhou M K Whyte
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology Laboratory, Division of Molecular and Genetic Medicine, The University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, S10 2RX, United Kingdom. [email protected]
Abstract

Mcl-1 is a member of the Bcl-2 Family that is regulated transcriptionally and post-transcriptionally, with expression of the full-length Mcl-1-encoded gene product resulting in enhanced cell survival. As reported here, the human Mcl-1 gene can also undergo differential splicing, which yields an internally deleted, death-inducing gene product, Mcl-1(s/Delta)(TM). Whereas full-length Mcl-1 derives from three coding exons (instead of the two present in Bcl-2 and other anti-apoptotic members of this family), the Mcl-1(s/Delta)(TM) splice variant results from the joining of the first and third exons with skipping of the central exon. Because of the skipped exon and a shift in the reading frame downstream, the Bcl-2 homology domain (BH3) remains intact, whereas the BH1-, BH2-, and transmembrane-encoding domains do not. Mcl-1(s/Delta)(TM) thus has features similar to BH3 only, pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 Family members and, accordingly, was found to promote cell death. In addition to a variety of other types of regulation, the Mcl-1 gene appears ideally designed for the generation of either a Bcl-2-like viability promoting or, as reported here, a BH3 only death-inducing gene product.

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