Two distinct pathways leading to nuclear apoptosis

SA Susin, E Daugas, L Ravagnan… - The Journal of …, 2000 - rupress.org
SA Susin, E Daugas, L Ravagnan, K Samejima, N Zamzami, M Loeffler, P Costantini…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2000rupress.org
Apaf-1−/− or caspase-3−/− cells treated with a variety of apoptosis inducers manifest
apoptosis-associated alterations including the translocation of apoptosis-inducing factor
(AIF) from mitochondria to nuclei, large scale DNA fragmentation, and initial chromatin
condensation (stage I). However, when compared with normal control cells, Apaf-1−/− or
caspase-3−/− cells fail to exhibit oligonucleosomal chromatin digestion and a more
advanced pattern of chromatin condensation (stage II). Microinjection of such cells with …
Apaf-1−/− or caspase-3−/− cells treated with a variety of apoptosis inducers manifest apoptosis-associated alterations including the translocation of apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) from mitochondria to nuclei, large scale DNA fragmentation, and initial chromatin condensation (stage I). However, when compared with normal control cells, Apaf-1−/− or caspase-3−/− cells fail to exhibit oligonucleosomal chromatin digestion and a more advanced pattern of chromatin condensation (stage II). Microinjection of such cells with recombinant AIF only causes peripheral chromatin condensation (stage I), whereas microinjection with activated caspase-3 or its downstream target caspase-activated DNAse (CAD) causes a more pronounced type of chromatin condensation (stage II). Similarly, when added to purified HeLa nuclei, AIF causes stage I chromatin condensation and large-scale DNA fragmentation, whereas CAD induces stage II chromatin condensation and oligonucleosomal DNA degradation. Furthermore, in a cell-free system, concomitant neutralization of AIF and CAD is required to suppress the nuclear DNA loss caused by cytoplasmic extracts from apoptotic wild-type cells. In contrast, AIF depletion alone suffices to suppress the nuclear DNA loss contained in extracts from apoptotic Apaf-1−/− or caspase-3−/− cells. As a result, at least two redundant parallel pathways may lead to chromatin processing during apoptosis. One of these pathways involves Apaf-1 and caspases, as well as CAD, and leads to oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation and advanced chromatin condensation. The other pathway, which is caspase-independent, involves AIF and leads to large-scale DNA fragmentation and peripheral chromatin condensation.
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