1. Academic Validation
  2. The C terminus of Bax inhibitor-1 forms a Ca2+-permeable channel pore

The C terminus of Bax inhibitor-1 forms a Ca2+-permeable channel pore

  • J Biol Chem. 2012 Jan 20;287(4):2544-57. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M111.275354.
Geert Bultynck 1 Santeri Kiviluoto Nadine Henke Hristina Ivanova Lars Schneider Volodymyr Rybalchenko Tomas Luyten Koen Nuyts Wim De Borggraeve Ilya Bezprozvanny Jan B Parys Humbert De Smedt Ludwig Missiaen Axel Methner
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Signaling, K.U. Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. [email protected]
Abstract

Bax inhibitor-1 (BI-1) is a multitransmembrane domain-spanning endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-located protein that is evolutionarily conserved and protects against Apoptosis and ER stress. Furthermore, BI-1 is proposed to modulate ER Ca(2+) homeostasis by acting as a Ca(2+)-leak channel. Based on experimental determination of the BI-1 topology, we propose that its C terminus forms a Ca(2+) pore responsible for its Ca(2+)-leak properties. We utilized a set of C-terminal Peptides to screen for Ca(2+) leak activity in unidirectional (45)Ca(2+)-flux experiments and identified an α-helical 20-amino acid peptide causing Ca(2+) leak from the ER. The Ca(2+) leak was independent of endogenous ER Ca(2+)-release channels or other Ca(2+)-leak mechanisms, namely translocons and presenilins. The Ca(2+)-permeating property of the peptide was confirmed in lipid-bilayer experiments. Using mutant Peptides, we identified critical residues responsible for the Ca(2+)-leak properties of this BI-1 peptide, including a series of critical negatively charged aspartate residues. Using Peptides corresponding to the equivalent BI-1 domain from various organisms, we found that the Ca(2+)-leak properties were conserved among animal, but not plant and yeast orthologs. By mutating one of the critical aspartate residues in the proposed Ca(2+)-channel pore in full-length BI-1, we found that Asp-213 was essential for BI-1-dependent ER Ca(2+) leak. Thus, we elucidated residues critically important for BI-1-mediated Ca(2+) leak and its potential channel pore. Remarkably, one of these residues was not conserved among plant and yeast BI-1 orthologs, indicating that the ER Ca(2+)-leak properties of BI-1 are an added function during evolution.

Figures