1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of a conserved anti-apoptotic protein that modulates the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway

Identification of a conserved anti-apoptotic protein that modulates the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway

  • PLoS One. 2011;6(9):e25284. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025284.
Yu Zhang 1 Elisabet Johansson Marian L Miller Reiner U Jänicke Donald J Ferguson David Plas Jarek Meller Marshall W Anderson
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 School of Pharmacy, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States of America.
Abstract

Here we identified an evolutionarily highly conserved and ubiquitously expressed protein (C9orf82) that shows structural similarities to the death effector domain of apoptosis-related proteins. RNAi knockdown of C9orf82 induced Apoptosis in A-549 and MCF7/casp3-10b lung and breast carcinoma cells, respectively, but not in cells lacking Caspase-3, Caspase-10 or both. Apoptosis was associated with activated caspases-3, -8, -9 and -10, and inactivation of caspases 10 or 3 was sufficient to block Apoptosis in this pathway. Apoptosis upon knockdown of C9orf82 was associated with increased Caspase-10 expression and activation, which was required for the generation of an 11 kDa tBid fragment and activation of Caspase-9. These data suggest that C9orf82 functions as an anti-apoptotic protein that modulates a Caspase-10 dependent mitochondrial Caspase-3/9 feedback amplification loop. We designate this ubiquitously expressed and evolutionarily conserved anti-apoptotic protein Conserved Anti-Apoptotic Protein (CAAP). We also demonstrated that treatment of MCF7/casp3-10b cells with staurosporine and etoposides induced Apoptosis and knockdown of CAAP expression. This implies that the CAAP protein could be a target for chemotherapeutic agents.

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