1. Academic Validation
  2. DEDD regulates degradation of intermediate filaments during apoptosis

DEDD regulates degradation of intermediate filaments during apoptosis

  • J Cell Biol. 2002 Sep 16;158(6):1051-66. doi: 10.1083/jcb.200112124.
Justine C Lee 1 Olaf Schickling Alexander H Stegh Robert G Oshima David Dinsdale Gerald M Cohen Marcus E Peter
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 The Ben May Institute for Cancer Research, University of Chicago, 924 E 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Abstract

Apoptosis depends critically on regulated cytoskeletal reorganization events in a cell. We demonstrate that death effector domain containing DNA binding protein (DEDD), a highly conserved and ubiquitous death effector domain containing protein, exists predominantly as mono- or diubiquitinated, and that diubiquitinated DEDD interacts with both the K8/18 intermediate filament network and pro-caspase-3. Early in Apoptosis, both cytosolic DEDD and its close homologue DEDD2 formed filaments that colocalized with and depended on K8/18 and active Caspase-3. Subsequently, these filamentous structures collapsed into intracellular inclusions that migrated into cytoplasmic blebs and contained DEDD, DEDD2, active Caspase-3, and caspase-3-cleaved K18 late in Apoptosis. Biochemical studies further confirmed that DEDD coimmunoprecipitated with both K18 and pro-caspase-3, and kinetic analyses placed apoptotic DEDD staining prior to Caspase-3 activation and K18 cleavage. In addition, both Caspase-3 activation and K18 cleavage was inhibited by expression of DEDDDeltaNLS1-3, a cytosolic form of DEDD that cannot be ubiquitinated. Finally, siRNA mediated DEDD knockdown cells exhibited inhibition of staurosporine-induced DNA degradation. Our data suggest that DEDD represents a novel scaffold protein that directs the effector Caspase-3 to certain substrates facilitating their ordered degradation during Apoptosis.

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