Caenorhabditis elegans CED-9 protein is a bifunctional cell-death inhibitor
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 390 (6657), 305-308
- https://doi.org/10.1038/36889
Abstract
The Caenorhabditis elegans gene ced-9 prevents cells from undergoing programmed cell death and encodes a protein similar to the mammalian cell-death inhibitor Bcl-2. We show here that the CED-9 protein is a substrate for the C. elegans cell-death protease CED-3, which is a member of a family of cysteine proteases first defined by CED-3 and human interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE). CED-9 can be cleaved by CED-3 at two sites near its amino terminus, and the presence of at least one of these sites is important for complete protection by CED-9 against cell death. Cleavage of CED-9 by CED-3 generates a carboxy-terminal product that resembles Bcl-2 in sequence and in function. Bcl-2 and the baculovirus protein p35, which inhibits cell death in different species through a mechanism that depends on the presence of its cleavage site for the CED-3/ICE family of proteases, inhibit cell death additively in C. elegans. Our results indicate that CED-9 prevents programmed cell death in C. elegans through two distinct mechanisms: first, CED-9 may, by analogy with p35, directly inhibit the CED-3 protease by an interaction involving the CED-3 cleavage sites in CED-9; second, CED-9 may directly or indirectly inhibit CED-3 by means of a protective mechanism similar to that used by mammalian Bcl-2.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interaction and Regulation of Subcellular Localization of CED-4 by CED-9Science, 1997
- Interaction of CED-4 with CED-3 and CED-9: A Molecular Framework for Cell DeathScience, 1997
- Interaction between the C. elegans cell-death regulators CED-9 and CED-4Nature, 1997
- Developing Caenorhabditis elegans neurons may contain both cell-death protective and killer activities.Genes & Development, 1996
- Inhibition of the Caenorhabditis elegans cell-death protease CED-3 by a CED-3 cleavage site in baculovirus p35 proteinNature, 1995
- Activation of C. elegans cell death protein CED-9 by an ammo-acid substitution in a domain conserved in Bcl-2Nature, 1994
- The C. elegans cell death gene ced-3 encodes a protein similar to mammalian interleukin-1β-converting enzymeCell, 1993
- Bcl-2 is an inner mitochondrial membrane protein that blocks programmed cell deathNature, 1990
- Bcl-2 gene promotes haemopoietic cell survival and cooperates with c-myc to immortalize pre-B cellsNature, 1988
- Cloning and structural analysis of cDNAs for bcl-2 and a hybrid bcl-2/immunoglobulin transcript resulting from the t(14;18) translocationCell, 1986