Widlak Piotr, Garrard William T
Department of Molecular Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235, USA.
J Cell Biochem. 2005 Apr 15;94(6):1078-87. doi: 10.1002/jcb.20409.
Toward the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st centuries, clever in vitro biochemical complementation experiments and genetic screens from the laboratories of Xiaodong Wang, Shigekazu Nagata, and Ding Xue led to the discovery of two major apoptotic nucleases, termed DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) or caspase-activated DNase (CAD) and endonuclease G (Endo G). Both endonucleases attack chromatin to yield 3'-hydroxyl groups and 5'-phosphate residues, first at the level of 50-300 kb cleavage products and next at the level of internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, but these nucleases possess completely different cellular locations in normal cells and are regulated in vastly different ways. In non-apoptotic cells, DFF exists in the nucleus as a heterodimer, composed of a 45 kD chaperone and inhibitor subunit (DFF45) [also called inhibitor of CAD (ICAD-L)] and a 40 kD latent nuclease subunit (DFF40/CAD). Apoptotic activation of caspase-3 or -7 results in the cleavage of DFF45/ICAD and release of active DFF40/CAD nuclease. DFF40's nuclease activity is further activated by specific chromosomal proteins, such as histone H1, HMGB1/2, and topoisomerase II. DFF is regulated by multiple pre- and post-activation fail-safe steps, which include the requirements for DFF45/ICAD, Hsp70, and Hsp40 proteins to mediate appropriate folding during translation to generate a potentially activatable nuclease, and the synthesis in stoichiometric excess of the inhibitors (DFF45/35; ICAD-S/L). By contrast, Endo G resides in the mitochondrial intermembrane space in normal cells, and is released into the nucleus upon apoptotic disruption of mitochondrial membrane permeability in association with co-activators such as apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF). Understanding further regulatory check-points involved in safeguarding non-apoptotic cells against accidental activation of these nucleases remain as future challenges, as well as designing ways to selectively activate these nucleases in tumor cells.
在20世纪末和21世纪初,王晓东、长谷川滋、薛定实验室开展的巧妙的体外生化互补实验和基因筛选,促成了两种主要凋亡核酸酶的发现,即DNA片段化因子(DFF)或半胱天冬酶激活的脱氧核糖核酸酶(CAD)以及核酸内切酶G(Endo G)。这两种核酸酶均攻击染色质,产生3'-羟基基团和5'-磷酸残基,首先在50 - 300 kb的切割产物水平,接着在核小体间DNA片段化水平,但这些核酸酶在正常细胞中具有完全不同的细胞定位,且调控方式差异极大。在非凋亡细胞中,DFF以异二聚体形式存在于细胞核中,由一个45 kD的伴侣蛋白和抑制亚基(DFF45)[也称为CAD抑制剂(ICAD - L)]以及一个40 kD的潜在核酸酶亚基(DFF40/CAD)组成。半胱天冬酶 - 3或 - 7的凋亡激活导致DFF45/ICAD的切割以及活性DFF40/CAD核酸酶的释放。DFF40的核酸酶活性通过特定的染色体蛋白进一步激活,如组蛋白H1、HMGB1/2和拓扑异构酶II。DFF受到多个激活前和激活后的故障安全步骤的调控,其中包括DFF45/ICAD、Hsp70和Hsp40蛋白在翻译过程中介导适当折叠以产生潜在可激活核酸酶的需求,以及抑制剂(DFF45/35;ICAD - S/L)的化学计量过量合成。相比之下,Endo G在正常细胞中位于线粒体外膜间隙,在凋亡过程中线粒体膜通透性被破坏时,与诸如凋亡诱导因子(AIF)等共激活因子一起释放到细胞核中。了解保护非凋亡细胞免受这些核酸酶意外激活所涉及的进一步调控检查点,以及设计在肿瘤细胞中选择性激活这些核酸酶的方法,仍是未来的挑战。