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Molecular and Cellular Biology, August 2000, p. 5454-5468, Vol. 20, No. 15
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
BNIP3 and Genetic Control of Necrosis-Like Cell Death through
the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore
C.
Vande Velde,1
J.
Cizeau,1
D.
Dubik,1
J.
Alimonti,1
T.
Brown,1
S.
Israels,1
R.
Hakem,2 and
A. H.
Greenberg1,*
The Manitoba Institute of Cell Biology, University of
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3E 0V9,1 and
The Amgen Institute, Ontario Cancer Institute, University
of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C1,2 Canada
Received 7 January 2000/Returned for modification 22 February
2000/Accepted 3 May 2000
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ABSTRACT |
Many apoptotic signaling pathways are directed to
mitochondria, where they initiate the release of apoptogenic
proteins and open the proposed mitochondrial permeability transition
(PT) pore that ultimately results in the activation of the caspase
proteases responsible for cell disassembly. BNIP3 (formerly NIP3) is
a member of the Bcl-2 family that is expressed in mitochondria and
induces apoptosis without a functional BH3 domain. We report that
endogenous BNIP3 is loosely associated with mitochondrial membrane in
normal tissue but fully integrates into the mitochondrial
outer membrane with the N terminus in the cytoplasm and the C terminus
in the membrane during induction of cell death. Surprisingly,
BNIP3-mediated cell death is independent of Apaf-1, caspase activation,
cytochrome c release, and nuclear translocation of
apoptosis-inducing factor. However, cells transfected with BNIP3
exhibit early plasma membrane permeability, mitochondrial damage,
extensive cytoplasmic vacuolation, and mitochondrial autophagy,
yielding a morphotype that is typical of necrosis. These changes were
accompanied by rapid and profound mitochondrial dysfunction
characterized by opening of the mitochondrial PT pore, proton
electrochemical gradient (
m) suppression, and increased reactive
oxygen species production. The PT pore inhibitors cyclosporin A and
bongkrekic acid blocked mitochondrial dysregulation and cell death. We
propose that BNIP3 is a gene that mediates a
necrosis-like cell death through PT pore opening and mitochondrial dysfunction.
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INTRODUCTION |
Kerr et al. (22), on the
basis of distinct morphological criteria, identified apoptosis
as a programmed and intrinsic cell death pathway, in contrast to
necrosis, which was viewed as a passive response to injury. It is now
clear that apoptosis is a highly regulated genetic program that
is evolutionarily conserved in multicellular organisms and is essential
for development and tissue homeostasis (19, 57). The genetic
program results in the activation of cysteine aspartyl proteases
(caspases) that cleave nuclear and cytoplasmic substrates and
disassemble the cell (11, 54), yielding the characteristic
morphological features such as chromatin condensation, DNA
fragmentation, plasma membrane blebbing, and the formation of
apoptotic bodies (58). In contrast to
apoptosis, necrosis is considered an unregulated process
occurring in response to toxicants and physical injury. This form of
cell death is morphologically characterized by extensive mitochondrial swelling, cytoplasmic vacuolation, and early plasma membrane
permeability without major nuclear damage (22, 23, 55).
Mitochondria appear to play a central role in the induction of cell
death. This is thought to occur by at least three possible mechanisms:
(i) release of apoptogenic proteins that facilitate caspase
activation, (ii) disruption of electron transport, oxidative phosphorylation, and ATP production that may result in an energetic catastrophe, and (iii) alteration of the redox potential, resulting in
increased cellular oxidative stress (14). The main
biochemical determinant of apoptosis is the activation of
caspases, and this is in part regulated by mitochondria. All
caspases are synthesized as an inactive polypeptide (zymogen) that
must be proteolytically processed to form an active tetramer
(11). Recent work proposes that this processing is initiated
through autocatalytic activation. For example, the caspase 8 zymogen is aggregated for autoprocessing by ligand-induced clustering
of trimeric death receptors such as CD95/Fas (48). Active
caspase 8 cleaves the proapoptotic BCL-2 family member BID,
which is then able to translocate to mitochondria (30, 32).
BID, as well as many other apoptotic signals, induces
mitochondria to release cytochrome c, which functions as a
cofactor with dATP for Apaf-1 binding and activation of caspase 9 and downstream effector caspases (31, 51). Another less well studied mitochondrial apoptogenic protein is
apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF), a flavoprotein released in
response to apoptotic signals that translocates to the nucleus
to induce DNA fragmentation and chromatin condensation in a
caspase-independent manner (53).
Apoptotic cell death signals induce other mitochondrial changes, such
as opening of the permeability transition (PT) pore, a putative highly
regulated ion channel located at the contact sites between the inner
and outer mitochondrial membrane (8). The PT pore is a large
protein complex, primarily composed of the adenine nucleotide
transporter (ANT), cyclophilin D, and voltage-dependent anion
channel (VDAC [also called porin]), that can interact with several other proteins (8, 25). When the PT pore is in the open state, it permits the passage of solutes of ~1,500 Da and results in depolarization of mitochondria, which consequently decreases
the measured proton electrochemical gradient (
m). This, in turn,
can lead to the inhibition of respiration, generation of reactive
oxygen species (ROS), and loss of ATP production (1, 8). PT
pore opening also increases the permeability of certain ions across the
mitochondrial membrane, resulting in increased water influx into the
matrix and consequent large-amplitude mitochondrial swelling (16,
29).
The biochemical determinants of necrotic cell death are less well
defined, but similar to apoptosis, it has been suggested that
the PT pore might play a major role in necrosis. PT pore opening has
been described in response to a rise in cytosolic free
Ca2+, anoxia, and reperfusion oxidative stress with
overproduction of ROS in cardiac myocytes (8). Although both
apoptosis and necrosis are associated with PT pore opening,
necrosis is distinguished by an early loss of plasma membrane integrity
and ATP, whereas both are maintained and ATP production is required for
apoptosis (28, 41).
BNIP3 (formerly known as NIP3) is a member of a unique subfamily of
death-inducing mitochondrial proteins that includes NIX (also called
BNIP3
and BNIP3L/B5) (5, 35, 42, 61) and a
Caenorhabditis elegans ortholog, ceBNIP3
(61; J. Cizeau and A. H. Greenberg, submitted
for publication). BNIP3 family members contain a C-terminal
transmembrane (TM) domain that is required for mitochondrial
localization as well as for its proapoptotic activity (5,
6, 62). Many members of the BCL-2 family require a BCL-2 homology
3 (BH3) domain to induce apoptosis. BNIP3 contains a sequence
that resembles a BH3 domain (amino acids 110 to 118) (61).
However, in the context of the BNIP3 protein, we have shown that it is
not required for heterodimerization with BCL-2 family members or cell
death, both in vivo and in vitro (47), indicating that BNIP3
does not trigger apoptosis, like most BH3-containing proteins.
Currently, the mechanism of induction of apoptosis and cell
death by BNIP3 expression is unknown. Its localization to mitochondria,
similar to several other proapoptotic BCL-2 family members,
raises the possibility that BNIP3 initiates apoptosis at this site.
We report that BNIP3 induces cell death following integration into the
mitochondrial outer membrane with the N terminus in the cytoplasm and
the C terminus in the membrane (Ncyto-Cin
orientation). Cell death is caspase independent and characterized
by early plasma membrane and mitochondrial damage, before the
appearance of chromatin condensation or DNA fragmentation. BNIP3
induces rapid opening of the mitochondrial PT pore accompanied by

m suppression and increased ROS production. These changes and
BNIP3-induced cell death are blocked by the PT pore inhibitors
cyclosporin A and bongkrekic acid. We propose that BNIP3 activates a
novel caspase-independent necrosis-like cell death pathway, which
is mediated through the opening of the PT pore.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell lines.
MCF-7 and HeLa cells were cultured in
minimal essential medium (MEM) (Gibco-BRL) supplemented with 10% fetal
bovine serum (FBS) (Cansera), 1% MEM sodium pyruvate (Gibco-BRL), 1%
HEPES (Gibco-BRL), and 1% L-glutamine (Gibco-BRL). Mouse
embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) deficient in Apaf-1, caspase 9, or
caspase 3 were cultured as previously described (17).
293T and 293-Bcl-2 cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's
medium (DMEM) (Gibco-BRL) supplemented with 10% FBS.
Expression plasmids.
T7-tagged pcDNA3-BNIP3, T7-tagged
pcDNA3-BNIP3
TM (6), and HA-tagged pcDNA3-BNIP3
(5) have been described previously. pcDNA3-caspase-9-His6 and pcDNA1-p35 were gifts from
Emad Alnemri (Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pa.).
pcDNA3-Apaf-1 and pFLAG-CMV-5a-tBID were provided by Xiaodong Wang
(Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Dallas, Tex.) and Junying Yuan
(Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.), respectively.
Reagents.
Murine monoclonal anti-T7 antibody was purchased
from Novagen (Madison, Wis.). Murine monoclonal anti-cytochrome
c antibodies for immunoblotting (65981A) and
immunofluorescence (67971A) were purchased from Pharmingen. Mouse
monoclonal anti-poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, anti-BCL-XL,
and antiactin antibodies were purchased from Alexis Biochemicals (San
Diego, Calif.), Transduction Laboratories (Lexington, Ky.), and ICN
Biochemicals (Montreal, Canada), respectively. Rabbit polyclonal
anti-AIF was a gift from Guido Kroemer (CNRS, Paris, France). Rabbit
anti-FLAG polyclonal antibody and mouse anti-HA monoclonal antibody
were purchased from Zymed (South San Francisco, Calif.) and Boehringer
Mannheim (Indianapolis, Ind.), respectively. Secondary antibodies, goat
anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG)-horseradish peroxidase, goat
anti-mouse IgG-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), and goat anti-rabbit
IgG-FITC were all purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, Mo.).
Goat anti-mouse IgG-Cy3 was from Chemicon (Temecula, Calif.).
Assessment of mitochondrial protein targeting and
orientation.
MCF-7 and 293T cells (106) were
transiently transfected with LipofectAmine reagent (Gibco-BRL) with 8 µg of DNA for 12 h. Mitochondria were isolated according to
Goping et al. (13) with modifications. Briefly, at 4°C,
thigh muscle from the mouse hind limb or transfected cells were
isolated or scraped, respectively, and washed twice in 5 ml of HIM
(0.2% [wt/vol] bovine serum albumin, 200 mM mannitol, 70 mM sucrose,
10 mM HEPES-KOH, 1 mM EGTA [pH 7.5]). Cells were resuspended in 2 ml
of HIM and homogenized on ice three times for 3 to 10 s using a
Polytron homogenizer (setting 6.5). Large cellular debris was removed
from the homogenate via centrifugation at 430 × g for
10 min. The supernatant was diluted in HIM (minus bovine serum
albumin), and mitochondria were collected by centrifugation at
5,400 × g for 10 min and resuspended in cMRM (250 mM
sucrose, 10 mM HEPES-KOH, 1 mM ATP, 5 mM sodium succinate, 0.08 mM ADP, 2 mM K2HPO4 [pH 7.5]) to 1 mg of
mitochondrial protein per ml and adjusted to 1 mM dithiothreitol just
prior to use.
To assess the association of proteins with the mitochondrial membrane,
30 or 100 µg of mitochondria isolated from transfected cells or
tissue, respectively, were pelleted and resuspended to 0.25 mg of
protein per ml in freshly prepared 0.1 M Na2CO3
(pH 11.5) and incubated on ice for 30 min (13).
Mitochondrial membranes were collected via ultracentrifugation at
100,000 × g for 1 h at 4°C in a Beckman Optima
TLX ultracentrifuge (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, Calif.).
Association of the proteins with the mitochondrial membrane was
assessed via Western blot analysis of the pellets and the lyophilized supernatants.
To determine protein orientation, 293T cells were transiently
transfected with T7-tagged BNIP3 and incubated with 3 µg of trypsin
(Sigma) per ml for 10 min on ice. Trypsin was inactivated with a
100-fold excess of soybean trypsin inhibitor (Sigma). Trypsin-treated mitochondria were pelleted, subjected to alkali elution, and
immunoblotted with mouse monoclonal anti-BNIP3 (Ana40) or anti-T7
(Novagen) antibodies.
-Galactosidase cell death assay.
Various doses of the
peptide caspase inhibitor Ac-zVAD-fmk (Enzyme System Products,
Dublin, Calif.) were applied to 105 293T cells
cotransfected, using LipofectAmine reagent (Gibco-BRL), with 0.01 µg
of the reporter plasmid pcDNA3-
gal plus the indicated expression
plasmids to a final amount of 0.75 µg of DNA (see Fig. 2), as
adjusted with empty vector. Cells were fixed, stained, and evaluated
27 h posttransfection as described previously (38). Similar strategies were used to evaluate the expression of pcDNA1-p35 as a caspase inhibitor (1.95 µg of DNA total) and to determine the killing efficiency of BNIP3 expressed in MEF cells (1.2 µg of DNA
with 0.3 µg of
-galactosidase).
Assessment of caspase activation.
Lysates were collected
from 293T cells, transiently transfected via the CaPO4
method (44), at the indicated times. Aliquots of these
lysates were run under Laemmli sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) conditions and immunoblotted with mouse
monoclonal anti-PARP. Results were visualized with an enhanced chemiluminescence system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Amersham, U.K.).
Transfected 293T cells were also assayed for caspase cleavage via
colorigenic cleavage of the peptide Ac-DEVD-pNA (Biomol, Plymouth Meeting, Pa.), according to the conditions outlined by Quignon et al.
(46), using 100 µM peptide. Where appropriate, samples were preincubated with 500 nM Ac-DEVD-fmk for 30 min at room
temperature. Data were acquired on a Multiskan MCC/340 (Titertek) plate
reader at 405 nm.
Assessment of cytochrome c release.
Mitochondria
were isolated from CaPO4-transfected 293T cells using 70 strokes (tight pestle) in a 1-ml Dounce homogenizer (Wheaton) in 300 µl of CFS buffer as previously described (52). Mitochondria were resuspended in H buffer (52). Aliquots of 5 µg of protein were analyzed on Laemmli SDS-15% PAGE gels and immunoblotted with anti-cytochrome c monoclonal antibody.
Equal loading was ensured by probing the same blot with monoclonal
antiactin. Results were visualized with enhanced chemiluminescence.
Cytochrome c release was also determined via indirect
immunofluorescence of transfected MCF-7 and 293T cells. Briefly, cells
grown on coverslips were costained with Cy3-conjugated mouse
anti-cytochrome c monoclonal antibody and an appropriate tag
(HA for BNIP3 and FLAG for tBID), which was visualized with
FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG. Cells were also stained with
Hoechst dye to determine apoptotic nuclear morphology. No fewer
than 200 cells were scored for each sample. Fluorescence was visualized
and captured using a Zeiss axiophot microscope equipped with a cooled
charge-coupled device camera.
DNA fragmentation assays and annexin V staining.
DNA
fragmentation was detected using the in situ cell death detection kit
with fluorescein (Boehringer Mannheim) as per the manufacturer's
recommendations in the presence or absence of 50 µM Ac-zVAD-fmk or
Ac-FA-fmk. Images were captured as described earlier. No fewer than 200 nuclei were scored manually for each sample. Annexin V staining was
performed exactly as described by the manufacturer (Boehringer
Mannheim), and samples were analyzed via flow cytometry.
Assessment of PT pore opening by confocal imaging.
Aliquots
of 293T cells were grown on coverslips, and 9 to 10 h after BNIP3
or control transfections using the CaPO4 method, the cells
were washed with Hanks' balanced salt solution-10 mM HEPES (pH 7.2)
(HH buffer) before staining with 1 µM calcein-AM ester (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) and 5 mM CoCl2 at room temperature
for 15 minutes. The CoCl2 was added to quench the cytoplasmic staining so only the fluorescent mitochondria were imaged
(1). Cells were washed four times and resuspended in HH
buffer before imaging on an Olympus IX70 inverted confocal laser
microscope using Fluoview 2.0 software (Carson Group Inc., Markham,
Ontario, Canada). A bandpass filter of 488 nm was used for capturing
the calcein images, while Nomarski optics were used to obtain
transmitted light images of the cells. To determine the mitochondrial
calcein fluorescence levels, individual cells were identified using
Nomarski optics and total mitochondrial fluorescence per cell was
measured using Northern Eclipse software, version 5.0 (Empix Inc.,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada).
Mitochondrial 
m and ROS production.
Changes in
mitochondrial function were determined by incubating 106
293T cells, transiently transfected via the CaPO4 method,
with either 1 µM JC-1, 40 nM DiOC6, or 2 µM
dihydroethidium (HE) (all from Molecular Probes, Inc.) for 30 minutes
at 37°C in Hanks' balanced salt solution (Gibco-BRL). Cells were
scored using a FACScalibur flow cytometer (Becton-Dickinson, San Jose,
Calif.), and data were analyzed on Cellquest software, version 3.1 (Becton-Dickinson). Controls were performed in the presence or absence
of 50 µM mCICCP (Sigma) or an excess of 30%
H2O2. For inhibition experiments, cyclosporin A
(Sigma) or bongkrekic acid (a gift from J. A. Duine, Delft
University, Delft, The Netherlands) was added 2 h prior to
transfection. All cells were harvested 8 h after transfection and
stained with 40 nM DiOC6, 2 µM HE, or 1 µg of propidium
iodide (PI) (Sigma) per ml. In all cases, samples were gated to exclude cellular debris.
Electron microscopy.
Transfected 293T cells were fixed with
2% paraformaldehyde-0.1% gluteraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate
for 1 to 2 h at room temperature. Cells were postfixed with 1%
osmium tetroxide for 1.5 h, washed, and block stained for 1 h
in 3% aqueous uranyl acetate. The samples were then washed again,
dehydrated with graded alcohol, and embedded in Epon-Araldyte resin
(Maynard Scientific). Ultrathin sections were cut on a Reichert
ultramicrotome, counterstained with 0.3% lead citrate, and examined on
a Philips EM420 electron microscope.
 |
RESULTS |
Mitochondrial membrane expression and integration of BNIP3.
We
developed polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to BNIP3 to examine
protein expression in tissues and cell lines. Surprisingly, high levels
of protein expression were found only in postnuclear lysates of murine
and human skeletal muscle but not in other tissues (e.g., thymus,
spleen, lung, kidney, heart, and brain) (Fig.
1A) or in many human and murine cell
lines examined (data not shown). Following subcellular fractionation,
the skeletal muscle BNIP3 protein was recovered in heavy membrane
fractions enriched for mitochondria but not in the S-100 cytosol (Fig.
1A, left panel). Subsequent reexamination of several human cell lines
that had been negative in cell lysates by Western blotting revealed
small amounts of BNIP3 protein in purified mitochondrial fractions
using monoclonal anti-human BNIP3 (hBNIP3) Ana40. Again, no protein was
detected in S-100 cytosol (Fig. 1A, right panel). The significance of
these observations was unclear, as skeletal muscle is a terminally differentiated tissue and largely unaffected by programmed cell death,
and the cell lines were completely viable. However, it did indicate
that the endogenous BNIP3 in skeletal muscle must be inactive. Recent
studies by Goping et al. (13) found that endogenous BAX is
only loosely associated with the mitochondrial membrane in normal cell
lines, but following death signals, it integrates fully and becomes
active. We therefore examined the mitochondrial membrane association of
BNIP3 in normal skeletal muscle and following transient transfection
and initiation of apoptosis.

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FIG. 1.
BNIP3 expression and integration into the mitochondrial
membrane. (A) Left panel: mitochondrion-enriched heavy membrane (HM)
and S-100 cytosol (S-100) subcellular fractions of mouse tissues were
isolated and alkali extracted as described in Materials and Methods,
then Western blotted with polyclonal anti-BNIP3 antibody. BNIP3 lanes
are lysates of 293T cells transfected with BNIP3. Right panel: HeLa
cells were fractionated as described above, and fractions were Western
blotted with monoclonal anti-BNIP3 antibody Ana40. Nonspecific staining
was evaluated by adding GST-hBNIP3 to a parallel incubation mixture.
(B) Subcellular fractions of hBNIP3-T7-transfected 293T (top) and MCF-7
(middle) cells were alkali extracted and blotted with mouse monoclonal
anti-BNIP3 Ana40 antibody. Mouse skeletal muscle tissue prepared in the
same manner was blotted for BCL-XL (bottom). (C)
Mitochondrial heavy membrane fractions from hBNIP3-T7-transfected 293T
cells were trypsin digested and/or alkali extracted, as described in
Materials and Methods, and blotted with either Ana40 mouse monoclonal
anti-hBNIP3 or anti-T7 antibodies. Arrows indicate specific
antibody-reactive bands at 40, 18, and 8 kDa. P, heavy membrane pellet;
S, S-100 supernatant.
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The membrane association of BNIP3 was determined following alkali
extraction of mitochondria, which will dissociate and solubilize unintegrated protein. BNIP3 in mouse skeletal muscle was exclusively associated with the mitochondrion-enriched heavy membrane pellet in
normal buffers (Fig. 1A), but following alkali treatment, the majority
of the protein was soluble and detected in the S-100 supernatant. In
contrast, endogenous BCL-XL from murine muscle remained
tightly associated with the heavy membrane fractions following alkali
treatment, as expected of an integral membrane protein (Fig. 1B, lower
panel). We performed a similar experiment using mitochondria derived
from 293T or MCF-7 cells transiently transfected with BNIP3. In
contrast to the endogenous protein, transfected BNIP3 remained tightly
associated with the heavy membrane fractions following alkali elution
(Fig. 1B).
Integrated BNIP3 has an Ncyto-Cin
orientation in the mitochondrial outer membrane.
The orientation
of a protein in any membrane may be a contributing factor to its
function and regulation (40). We exploited the trypsin
cleavage sites in the BNIP3 TM domain (amino acids 164 to 184) and the
epitope recognized by the monoclonal anti-BNIP3 antibody Ana40 (amino
acids 112 to 124) to determine the mitochondrial membrane orientation
of transfected BNIP3 bearing a C-terminal T7 tag.
There are three possible orientations for BNIP3 in the mitochondrial
membrane that can be detected by this method: (i) mitochondrial inner
membrane, (ii) mitochondrial outer membrane with an
Ncyto-Cin orientation, or (iii) mitochondrial
outer membrane with an Nin-Ccyto orientation.
Integration of BNIP3 into the mitochondrial inner membrane would
prevent exposure to trypsin and thus result in an undigested 40-kDa
BNIP3 homodimer detectable by both Ana40 and anti-T7 antibodies.
Alternatively, orientation of BNIP3 such that the C terminus is
cytosolic would permit cleavage at R185 and R186, yielding a truncated
BNIP3 homodimer of ~38 kDa that would be detected by Ana40 but not by
anti-T7 antibody since the C-terminal T7 tag would be lost. Finally, a
cytosolic N-terminal orientation would yield truncated fragments
detectable by one or both antibodies. Following isolation of
mitochondria from BNIP3-transfected cells and trypsin digestion, a
prominent 18-kDa band was recognized by both antibodies and an 8-kDa
band was detected by the anti-T7 but not the Ana40 antibody (Fig. 1C).
The 8-kDa band was detected in the heavy membrane pellet fraction.
Thus, the 8-kDa band would contain the extreme C-terminal T7 epitope
and is likely a dimer of two 4-kDa monomeric C-terminal fragments
representing approximately amino acids 154 to 194. This pattern is
consistent with the integration of BNIP3 in the mitochondrial outer
membrane in the Ncyto-Cin orientation.
BNIP3-induced cell death is caspase independent and does not
induce cytochrome c release.
To determine if
BNIP3-induced cell death was mediated by caspases, we evaluated the
effectiveness of the broad-spectrum peptide caspase inhibitor
Ac-zVAD-fmk and the baculovirus antiapoptotic gene p35 in
preventing BNIP3-induced cell death following transient transfection of
293T cells. BNIP3-induced cell death was unaffected by the same
concentration of inhibitor that effectively suppressed either tBID or
caspase 9/Apaf-1 transfectants by greater than 50% (Fig.
2A). Furthermore, p35 plasmid was
similarly ineffective in abrogating BNIP3 cell death at concentrations
of up to 1.5 µg, well above the 0.5 µg of p35 plasmid required to
block caspase 9/Apaf-1-induced cell death (Fig. 2B).

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FIG. 2.
Broad-spectrum caspase inhibitors Ac-zVAD-fmk and
baculovirus p35 fail to inhibit BNIP3-induced cell death. (A) 293T
cells were transiently cotransfected with the reporter plasmid
pcDNA3- gal and either BNIP3-T7 ( ) or inactive mutant
BNIP3 TM-T7 ( ). Cells transfected with tBID-FLAG ( ) or
caspase 9-His6 plus Apaf-1 ( ) served as positive
controls. All groups were treated with increasing concentrations of
Ac-zVAD-fmk. (B) In a parallel experiment, 293T cells were transfected
as above with increasing concentrations of pcDNA1-p35. At 27 h
posttransfection, cells were fixed, stained, and evaluated for dead
cells as described in Materials and Methods. The data represent one of
three independent experiments with similar results.
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The caspase substrate Ac-DEVD-pNA was used to detect the activation
of caspase 3-like proteases in 293T cells transiently transfected
with either BNIP3, tBID, or the inactive mutant BNIP3
TM. Cells were
harvested at 1, 12, 18, 24, and 36 h posttransfection, and lysates
were prepared and incubated with the substrate. Lysates from cells
transfected with either BNIP3 or BNIP3
TM revealed only marginal
increases in proteolytic activity and were not inhibited by the
caspase inhibitor of the same specificity as Ac-DEVD-fmk (Fig.
3A). In contrast, tBID-transfected cells
exhibited a fourfold increase in substrate cleavage, and this was
blocked by treatment with Ac-DEVD-fmk (Fig. 3A). Lysates from BAX
transfectants were similar to those of tBID transfectants (data not
shown).

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FIG. 3.
BNIP3 does not activate caspases. (A) BNIP3
expression does not activate a DEVDase. Lysates from 293T cells
transfected with BNIP3-T7, BNIP3 TM-T7, or tBID-FLAG were harvested
at 1, 12, 18, 24, and 36 h and then incubated with the substrate
DEVD-pNA in the presence (solid bars) or absence (shaded bars) of 500 nM Ac-DEVD-fmk. Fold activation was determined as the ratio of
transfected cells to untransfected controls. Results are expressed as
the mean ± standard error (SE) from at least three independent
experiments. (B) BNIP3 expression fails to activate PARP cleavage.
Lysates from BNIP3-T7-, BNIP3 TM-T7-, or BAX-transfected 293T
cells were harvested at 12, 24, 36, and 48 h posttransfection and
immunoblotted with mouse monoclonal anti-PARP antibody. Arrows indicate
the unprocessed p116 and processed p85 bands. (C) BNIP3 expression
fails to activate procaspase 3 processing. Lysates from BNIP3-T7-,
BNIP3 TM-T7-, or BAX-transfected 293T cells were
harvested 24 h posttransfection and immunoblotted with mouse
monoclonal anti-procaspase 3 antibody. The arrow indicates the
unprocessed p32 band. Lane C, untreated control.
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We next immunoblotted whole-cell lysates of BNIP3-expressing 293T cells
collected at 12, 24, 36, and 48 h posttransfection for the
caspase substrate PARP and found little evidence of proteolysis (Fig. 3B) and no processing of procaspase 3 (Fig. 3C). In contrast, efficient processing of PARP from 116 to 86 kDa (Fig. 3B) and procaspases 3 (Fig. 3C), 7, and 9 (data not shown) were detected in
lysates from BAX transfectants. No processing of caspases 7 and 9 was detected in BNIP3 lysates up to 36 h (data not shown).
Since BNIP3 integrates into the mitochondrial outer membrane, it may
act to initiate cell death by mitochondrial perturbation and the
release of cytochrome c, a cofactor for Apaf-1. We initially used indirect immunofluorescence to examine cytochrome c
release from cells expressing BNIP3 following transient transfection. BNIP3- and BNIP3
TM-expressing cells, detected by immunostaining for
the C-terminal epitope tag, showed no significant cytochrome c release in MCF-7 cells, which are caspase 3 deficient,
and only very low levels in 293T cells (Fig.
4A). On the other hand, 91% of MCF-7 and
71% of 293T cells released cytochrome c 48 h after transfection with tBID, while the level of cell death induced by tBID
and BNIP3 was equivalent (Fig. 4A). In tBID-transfected cells,
cytochrome c was released prior to apoptosis, as
determined by Hoechst dye staining.

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FIG. 4.
BNIP3 does not induce mitochondrial cytochrome
c release. (A) 293T cells transiently transfected with
BNIP3-T7, BNIP3 TM-T7, or tBID-FLAG were stained with monoclonal
anti-cytochrome c antibody and Cy3-labeled anti-mouse
IgG antibody then evaluated by fluorescent microscopy. Time
course of cytochrome c release and apoptosis
following BNIP3-T7 ( ), BNIP3 TM-T7 ( ), or tBID-FLAG ( )
transfection of 293T (left panels) and MCF-7 (right panels) cells is
shown. Cytochrome c release was scored as the loss of
cytoplasmic granular staining. Apoptotic cells were scored based on
chromatin condensation following Hoechst staining. The data from three
independent experiments are shown as the mean ± SE for each time
point. (B) Western blot analysis of the time course of release of
cytochrome c from mitochondria into S-100 cytosol. Aliquots
of 5 µg of heavy membrane (HM) and S-100 fractions from 293T cells
transiently transfected with BNIP3, BNIP3 TM, or tBID were harvested
at 18, 24, and 36 h posttransfection and Western blotted with
mouse anti-cytochrome c antibody (p16). The same membrane
was blotted with mouse antiactin antibody (p43) to demonstrate equal
loading. Control, untransfected cells.
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We next reexamined cytochrome c release by Western blotting
heavy membrane (HM) and S-100 subcellular fractions of 293T cells at
18, 24, and 36 h posttransfection. A significant increase in cytochrome c was seen in the S-100 fractions of tBID but not
BNIP3 transfectants at 18 and 24 h (Fig. 4B). Loss of cell
viability of tBID and BNIP3 transfectants was equivalent, as determined by trypan blue dye exclusion (data not shown). The decrease in cytochrome c levels in S-100 of tBID-expressing cells at
36 h was concomitant with extensive cell death. S-100 cytochrome
c levels in BNIP3-transfected cells were similar to that of
the inactive BNIP3
TM and control cells despite a fivefold difference in viability (Fig. 4B). A time course revealed that chromatin condensation following BNIP3 transfection preceded the release of
cytochrome c, indicating that it could not be responsible
for the nuclear changes (data not shown).
BNIP3 induces cell death in fibroblasts deficient in Apaf-1,
caspase 9, or caspase 3.
Since the above experiments
suggested that BNIP3 induced cell death without cytochrome c
release or caspase activation, we next examined the function of
BNIP3 in cells lacking Apaf-1 or Apaf-1-activated caspases 9 and 3. Using the
-galactosidase cell death assay, wild-type,
Apaf-1
/
, caspase 9
/
, and
caspase 3
/
MEFs were transiently transfected with
either BNIP3 or BNIP3
TM. BNIP3 was able to induce cell death
(~50%) in the wild-type and all mutant MEF lines tested (Fig.
5A). In contrast, the mutant cells
exhibited profound resistance to adriamycin-induced cell death (Fig.
5B), confirming an earlier report (17). Immunoblot analysis
of whole-cell lysates showed equal expression of BNIP3 and BNIP3
TM
in all of the MEF cell lines (data not shown).

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FIG. 5.
BNIP3-induced cell death in the absence of Apaf-1,
caspase 9, or caspase 3. (A) Wild-type,
Apaf-1 / , caspase 9 / , and
caspase 3 / MEFs were transiently cotransfected with
pcDNA3- gal vector alone, BNIP3-T7, or BNIP3 TM-T7 and then scored
for dead cells as described in Materials and Methods. Results are
expressed as the mean ± SE from three independent experiments.
(B) The same cell aliquots of wild-type (WT), Apaf-1 / ,
caspase 9 / (Casp 9 / ), and
caspase 3 / (Casp 3 / ) MEFs used for
the experiments in panel A were transfected with pcDNA3- gal and
treated with medium or with 3 µg of adriamycin per ml for 24 h,
and dead cells were enumerated in three experiments. N,
N-Dimethyl formamide (DMF) was used to dilute the
adriamycin.
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Rapid loss of plasma membrane permeability in
BNIP3-transfected cells.
Cells undergoing apoptosis
externalize phosphatidylserine (PS) while maintaining an intact
plasma membrane (37). A time course following BNIP3
transfection identified increased plasma membrane permeability as early
as 2 h posttransfection and did not increase further over the
following 12 h as determined by the failure of cells to exclude PI
(Fig. 6A). Cells gated to determine annexin binding as a measure of phosphatidylserine externalization in
PI
populations at 12 h revealed no increase in
annexin staining of BNIP3-transfected in cells that excluded PI, in
contrast to cells transfected with tBID, BAX, or caspase 9/Apaf-1
(Fig. 6B). BNIP3-expressing cells analyzed at 18 and 24 h
similarly did not show any increase in annexin staining in
PI
cells (data not shown). Thus, BNIP3 induces early
permeability of the plasma membrane but not PS externalization.

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FIG. 6.
BNIP3 induces rapid plasma membrane permeability but not
PS externalization. (A) Untransfected and BNIP3-T7-transfected 293T
cells were harvested at 2, 4, 8, and 12 h posttransfection and
stained with PI. PI+ cells are expressed as the
mean ± SE of three or four experiments for each time point. (B)
Untransfected 293T cells (C) and 293T cells transfected with BNIP3-T7
(BNIP3), BNIP3 TM-T7 ( TM), tBID-FLAG (tBID), BAX, or
caspase 9/Apaf-1 (C9/A) were harvested at 12 h
posttransfection and stained for annexin V and PI. Cells that were
gated as PS+ PI are expressed as the
mean ± SE of three independent experiments.
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|
BNIP3 induces late DNA fragmentation that is independent of AIF
translocation.
DNA fragmentation and chromatin condensation are
hallmarks of caspase-dependent apoptotic cell death and
have been consistently seen in BNIP3-transfected cells (5,
6). Since we had demonstrated that plasma membrane was damaged
early following BNIP3 expression, we examined the relative rate at
which DNA fragmentation occurred using the TUNEL (terminal
deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling)
assay. BNIP3 transfectants showed increasing levels of TUNEL-positive
cells over time, but no activity was detected until 18 to 24 h and
maximal levels were not reached until 36 h, much slower than
tBID-induced DNA damage (Fig. 7A). This
contrasts with the initiation of plasma membrane damage by BNIP3 at
8 h and its completion by 18 h. In addition, we consistently observed only two or three TUNEL-positive foci in BNIP3-expressing cells, while tBID-transfected cells exhibited much more extensive nuclear fragmentation, with six to ten TUNEL-positive foci per cell
(Fig. 7B). DNA fragmentation could only be partially inhibited with 50 µM Ac-zVAD-fmk in BNIP3 transfectants but was nearly completely inhibited in tBID-expressing cells (Fig. 7C). No effect was observed in
parallel populations treated with 50 µM Ac-FA-fmk. We confirmed the
DNA fragmentation observed by TUNEL staining on agarose gels stained
with ethidium bromide. An oligonucleosomal ladder was easily detected
in tBID transfectants at 18, 24, and 36 h, while little DNA
degradation and ladder formation was observed in BNIP3 transfectants
even at 36 h (data not shown).



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FIG. 7.
BNIP3-induced cell death is characterized by late DNA
fragmentation. (A) Quantification of TUNEL-positive 293T cells
transiently transfected with BNIP3-T7, BNIP3 TM-T7, or tBID-FLAG and
stained at 18, 24, and 36 h. Values for BNIP3- and
tBID-transfected cells were significantly higher than those for
controls at all time points (P < 0.01). (B)
Illustration of transfected cells as in panel A harvested 24 h
posttransfection and stained with the TUNEL reagent (right) or Hoechst
dye (left). (C) Cells were transfected as in panel A in the absence
(open bars) or presence of 50 µM Ac-FA-fmk (solid bars) or 50 µM
Ac-zVAD-fmk (hatched bars). Cells were TUNEL stained 24 h
posttransfection, and the percent positive was scored by fluorescent
microscopy.
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|
Since wild-type BNIP3-induced chromatin condensation and DNA
fragmentation were not completely blocked by treatment with
Ac-zVAD-fmk, we hypothesized that AIF may also mediate the BNIP3
effects. AIF is a mitochondrial flavoprotein which, in response to an
apoptotic stimulus, translocates to the nucleus to induce
chromatin condensation and high-molecular-weight DNA fragmentation
(53). Immunofluorescence analysis and immunoblotting of
heavy membrane fractions of BNIP3-transfected 293T cells at 18, 24, and
36 h posttransfection found no AIF nuclear translocation despite
increases in the proportion of cells with condensed chromatin by
Hoechst staining (data not shown) (C. Vande Velde, J. Cizeau,
E. Daugas, G. Kroemer, and A. H. Greenberg, unpublished data).
BNIP3-expressing cells have ultrastructural features of
necrosis.
To determine the fine ultrastructural features of cells
following BNIP3 expression, we performed transmission electron
microscopy of 293T cells 24 h posttransfection. These experiments
revealed a nuclear phenotype of lightly dispersed foci of chromatin
condensation and heterochromatin (Fig.
8B) rather than the globular condensation typical of apoptosis. During a detailed examination of cellular organelles, we detected many rounded mitochondria in which the internal
cisternae had been destroyed, while the inner and outer membranes of
the mitochondria appeared to be intact in most cells (Fig. 8C). The
mitochondria did not appear to be undergoing gross swelling.
Surprisingly, BNIP3 transfectants were characterized by extensive
cytoplasmic vacuolation and dense bodies. High-power examination of
these structures revealed a heterogeneous mixture of electron-lucent
and electron-dense regions, many of which appear to be vacuoles and
autophagosomes (Fig. 8D and E), and some of the autophagic vacuoles
contained whorls of membranous material (Fig. 8F) that have been
observed during autophagic cell death (60).

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FIG. 8.
BNIP3 induces ultrastructural changes of necrosis.
Normal 293T cells (A) and BNIP3-expressing 293T cells (B to F) were
examined 24 h posttransfection by transmission electron
microscopy. Nuclei of BNIP3-expressing cells exhibited dispersed foci
of chromatin condensation and heterochromatin (B) compared to control
cells (A). High-power magnifications of BNIP3 transfectants showed
rounded mitochondria with disrupted internal structures (arrows) (C),
extensive cytoplasmic vacuolation (D), autophagosomes (arrows) (E), and
autophagic vacuoles containing membranous whorls (F). (A and B), bar, 1 µm; (C to F) bar, 0.5 µm.
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BNIP3 induces mitochondrial PT pore opening, loss of 
m, and
increased ROS production.
Since our studies to this point had
established that BNIP3 was a mitochondrial outer membrane protein and
electron micrographs of BNIP3-transfected cells featured disturbances
in mitochondrial structure, we hypothesized that BNIP3 may directly
induce mitochondrial dysfunction. Opening of the mitochondrial PT pore
often accompanies both apoptotic and necrotic cell death, with
the consequent loss of transmembrane potential (
m) and
respiratory inhibition with ROS production. The status of the PT pore
can be determined with the membrane-permeating fluorescent probe
calcein-AM, which freely enters mitochondria but cannot exit except
through an open PT pore following processing by cellular esterases.
Using CoCl2 quenching of cytosolic fluorescence as
described by Bernardi et al. (1), the release of calcein
from mitochondria was analyzed by confocal laser microscopy and
quantitative image analysis. Following BNIP3 transfection, 293T
cells lose mitochondrial calcein staining as early as 8 h
posttransfection (Fig. 9A
and B), indicating rapid opening of
the PT pore.


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FIG. 9.
BNIP3-induced cell death is characterized by
mitochondrial dysfunction. (A) Untransfected (control), BNIP3-T7
(BNIP3)- and BNIP3 TM-T7 (BNIP3 TM)-transfected 293T cells were
harvested 24 h after transfection and incubated with calcein-AM in
the presence of CoCl2 to quench cytoplasmic fluorescence.
Cells were visualized by confocal laser microscopy (left) and
Nomarski optics (right). (B) Quantitation of calcein fluorescence of
cells transfected as described for panel A. The percentages of cells
measured as low (CALCEINLO), intermediate
(CALCEINMED), or high (CALCEINHI) total
fluorescence units per cell are shown. The experiment was repeated with
similar results. By chi analysis, P < 0.001 for the
comparison of control versus BNIP3 and BNIP3 TM versus BNIP3. (C)
Untransfected (control) and BNIP3-T7 (BNIP3)-, BNIP3 TM-T7 ( TM)-,
or tBID-FLAG (tBID)-transfected 293T cells were harvested at 24 h,
stained with JC-1, and analyzed by flow cytometry as a measure of
 m. JC-1LO cells were defined as cells that were gated
within the same range as those treated with 50 µM ClCCP (~99%).
BNIP3- and tBID- but not BNIP3 TM-transfected cells were
significantly suppressed compared to controls (P < 0.01). (D) Cells treated as in panel C were stained with HE to
measure ROS production. HEHI cells were defined as cells
that were gated within the same range as those treated with 30%
H2O2 for 15 min (~98%). Levels in BNIP3- and
tBID-expressing cells were significantly increased compared to
untreated controls or BNIP3 TM (P < 0.03; the
Student t test). (E) Samples from the control and each of
the transfections in panel C were trypan blue stained as a measure of
cell death. BNIP3- and tBID-transfected cells were significantly
increased compared to untreated controls or BNIP3 TM (P
< 0.01; the Student t test).
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|
To determine if BNIP3-expressing cells also decrease their
transmembrane potential and produce ROS, we used the cell-permeating lipophilic dyes JC-1 and HE and assessed the staining by flow cytometry
using gates established from normal untransfected 293T cells. At
24 h posttransfection, cells were collected, stained, and
analyzed. BNIP3 was almost as efficient as tBID at suppressing 
m,
increasing ROS generation, and inducing cell death (Fig. 9C to E).
These changes were identified as early as 2 h posttransfection and
did not increase further during 12 h of analysis (data not shown),
indicating that the mitochondrial dysfunction was maximal and occurred
as early as plasma membrane permeability and cell death (Fig. 6A).
Inhibition of PT pore opening prevents mitochondrial dysfunction
and cell death.
To confirm that the loss of 
m, increase in
ROS production, and the ensuing cell death were the result of opening
of the PT pore, we next examined the effect of PT pore inhibitors on BNIP3-induced cell death and mitochondrial deregulation using the
potentiometric fluorescent probe DiOC6 in combination with HE. BNIP3-expressing cells showed ~55% DiOC6-low and
HE-high cells as detected in the upper left quadrant of Fig. 10D,
consistent with previous experiments using JC-1, while
BNIP3
TM-transfected cells were not affected compared to untreated
controls. As noted earlier, opening of the PT pore can be inhibited by
cyclosporin A, which interacts with cyclophilin D, or bongkrekic acid,
which binds to the ANT. Treatment of BNIP3 transfectants with either cyclosporin A or bongkrekic acid revealed a dose-dependent reversal in

m suppression, ROS generation, and cell death (PI staining) (Fig.
10A to D). Maximum
suppression was about 50% of that in control cells. Cells were treated
with the drugs for 2 h and washed prior to transfection, a
procedure that did not affect BNIP3 expression in the 293T cells (Fig.
10E). Addition of either drug during the transfection suppressed BNIP3
expression. The drugs did not affect mitochondrial function and cell
death when added after the transfection.

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FIG. 10.
Inhibition of BNIP3-induced mitochondrial dysfunction
and cell death by PT pore inhibitors and Bcl-2. Untransfected (control)
and BNIP3-T7-transfected 293T cells harvested 8 h posttransfection
were treated with increasing doses of cyclosporin A or 100 µM
bongkrekic acid (BA) and stained with DiOC6 (A), HE (B), or
PI (C) as described above. BNIP3 TM-T7-transfected 293T cells were
used as a negative transfection control. Results are expressed as the
mean ± SE for at least three independent experiments. (D) Flow
cytometric histograms of HE and DiOC6 staining of
BNIP3-transfected cells treated with 50 µM cyclosporin A (CsA) or
100 µM bongkrekic acid (BA). (E) Western blot of
BNIP3-transfected cells treated as described above using anti-T7
epitope antibody. Antiactin antibody was used as a loading control.
Suppression of DiOC6 levels in BNIP3 cells was
significantly inhibited compared to BNIP3 cells at 25 µM
(P < 0.05) and 50 µM (P < 0.02)
cyclosporin A and 100 µM bongkrekic acid (P < 0.02).
Increase in HE fluorescence was inhibited at 25 µM (P < 0.03) and 50 µM (P < 0.02) cyclosporin A and
100 µM bongkrekic acid (P < 0.02). Cell death was
significantly suppressed at 50 µM cyclosporin A (P < 0.02), and 100 µM bongkrekic acid (P < 0.02).
(F) BNIP3-induced cell death (solid bars) in 293T cells and 293 cells
overexpressing BCL-2 (BCL-2) compared to the inactive BNIP3 TM mutant
(open bars). Eight hours following BNIP3 transfection, cells were
stained with PI and evaluated by flow cytometry. The percent dead cells
were calculated as the proportion of cells that were PI positive.
Equivalent transfection efficiency was obtained in both cell lines, as
detected by immunostaining.
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|
BNIP3 physically interacts with Bcl-2 (3, 6), and Bcl-2 and
Bcl-XL overexpression can partly suppress BNIP3-induced apoptosis, although this is overcome at high BNIP3 expression levels (5, 6). We next examined the effect of Bcl-2 on
BNIP3-induced cell death as measured by PI staining and found a
reduction in plasma membrane damage in Bcl-2-expressing cells (Fig.
10F).
 |
DISCUSSION |
In the present study, we have determined that BNIP3 is capable of
activating a novel form of cell death resembling necrosis as a
consequence of mitochondrial PT pore opening. This mechanism is
independent of caspases and the Apaf-1/cytochrome c
mitochondrial pathway and occurs before the appearance of nuclear damage.
The mitochondrial membrane integration of many proapoptotic
BCL-2 family members induces mitochondrial dysfunction, which plays an
important role in the cell death pathway. One of the key events in
apoptosis is the release of cytochrome c, which functions with dATP as a cofactor for Apaf-1 activation of the caspase cascade (14). There are currently three proposed
models to explain the mechanism of cytochrome c release: (i)
PT pore-induced mitochondrial swelling and subsequent outer membrane
rupture (56); (ii) cytochrome c exit from the
mitochondria through the PT pore (50); and (iii) an
undefined cytochrome c-specific channel in the mitochondrial
outer membrane (24). In one model, the PT pore is
hypothesized to serve as a conduit for cytochrome c release into the cytoplasm. This is supported by experiments that show a direct
interaction between BAX and components of the PT pore, including ANT
(33) and VDAC/porin (39), and evidence that BAX
may open the pore sufficiently to allow cytochrome c release (50). In contrast to BAX, BNIP3 does not induce cytochrome
c release despite evidence of rapid PT pore opening.
Therefore, a model in which opening of the PT pore is sufficient to
release cytochrome c is not supported by our data. BAX must
have other effects on mitochondrial membrane proteins to account
for the difference with BNIP3. We do not yet know if BNIP3 interacts
with the same mitochondrial pore proteins as BAX, such as ANT
(33) and VDAC/porin (39). Although BNIP3 kills
without cytochrome c release, it has been observed that the
BNIP3 homolog NIX/BNIP3L/BNIP3
/B5 recombinant protein induces
cytochrome c release from isolated mitochondria
(20). The reason for this difference from BNIP3 is not
known, but there are clear structural differences between the proteins
that may account for this effect. In addition, because the assay was
done in vitro, it will need to be confirmed that overexpression of the
NIX protein induces similar effects in vivo.
Another mechanism for cytochrome c release occurs as a
result of nonselective PT pore-induced mitochondrial matrix swelling and outer membrane rupture (56). Although electron
micrographs of BNIP3-transfected 293T cells show mitochondrial rounding
and destruction of cristae, we do not observe the large-amplitude swelling seen during growth factor withdrawal in
interleukin-3-dependent FL5.12 cells or Fas-treated Jurkat cells
(56). We have shown that cytochrome c release and
PT pore opening can be completely separated during BNIP3-induced cell
death and thus are independent events in the cell death program.
The absence of mitochondrial cytochrome c release does not
exclude the activation of a caspase-dependent apoptotic
pathway. For example, two different death pathways have been described in Fas-induced apoptosis, one of which leads to direct
activation of caspase 3 through receptor-activated caspase 8 and does not require cytochrome c, and a second that
requires mitochondrial release of cytochrome c to activate
caspase 3 and apoptosis (49). BNIP3, on the
other hand, requires neither Apaf-1/cytochrome c nor the
downstream caspases, as BNIP3-induced cell death was unaffected by
broad-spectrum caspase inhibitors and was fully functional in MEF
cell lines deficient in Apaf-1, caspase 9, or caspase 3. Thus,
BNIP3-induced cell death is primarily caspase independent. Induction of caspase-independent cell death has been increasingly observed, and examples include the adenoviral protein E4ORF4
(27) and cellular proteins PML (46), anti-CD2
(10), oncogenic Ras (7), and FADD
(21). Furthermore, BAX and BAK are able to induce cell
death, as opposed to the nuclear changes of apoptosis, in the
presence of the general caspase inhibitor Ac-zVAD-fmk (36, 59). Although cell death may be caspase independent, DNA
fragmentation and chromatin condensation following most
apoptotic signals require downstream caspases
(11). Nuclei in BNIP3 transfectants exhibit DNA
fragmentation and focal chromatin condensation, although these nuclear
changes are preceded by loss of plasma membrane integrity, and thus the
cells are likely already committed to die. Nevertheless, it is unclear
how the nuclear changes are mediated, as there is only minimal DEVDase
activation, even at the late time points. Furthermore, DNA
fragmentation is only partially inhibited by Ac-zVAD-fmk
Immunofluorescence and immunoblotting of subcellular fractions exclude
the participation of AIF, a caspase-independent mediator
(53), as it was not translocated from the mitochondria to
the nucleus in BNIP3-transfected cells. Ultrastructural analysis of
BNIP3-transfected cells revealed that the nuclei have a peculiar mottled appearance, with dispersed foci of chromatin condensation rather than the global large-scale condensation normally observed in
caspase-dependent apoptosis. Although we have not
definitively determined how BNIP3 induces DNA strand breaks, it appears
that the mechanism is not mediated by one of the known
apoptotic pathways. Although it is possible that the DNA
fragmentation is secondary to the opening of the PT pore, the toxicity
of cyclosporin A and bongkrekic acid over extended incubation times
following BNIP3 transfection precluded these experiments.
BNIP3 transfectants exhibit a rapid loss in plasma membrane integrity,
and this precedes the appearance of DNA fragmentation detected by
TUNEL. In contrast, cells expressing tBID, BAX, and caspase
9/Apaf-1 showed both the expected apoptotic phenotype of an
intact plasma membrane and PS externalization (PS+
PI
) as well as some cells with rapid plasma membrane
disruption. This observation suggests that the primary cause of
BNIP3-induced cell death is the loss of membrane integrity, which would
be more typical of a necrotic type of cell death. Electron micrograph analysis of BNIP3-transfected cells supports this interpretation. The
morphological changes show extensive cytoplasmic vacuolation and
mitochondrial deformation with minimal nuclear damage. Similar vacuole
formation has been observed in caspase-independent forms of cell
death, including anti-CD2-treated cells (10), neuronal cells
subjected to nerve growth factor withdrawal (60), and Ac-zVAD-fmk-treated BAX and BAK transfectants (36, 59).
BNIP3-expressing cells contain a heterogeneous population of
electron-dense and electron-lucent vacuoles, some of which appear to be
autophagic and are very similar to the structures recently observed in
sympathetic neurons after nerve growth factor withdrawal
(60). In this study, autophagic degeneration and vacuole
formation were blocked by treatment with an autophagy inhibitor,
3-methyladenine, but not the caspase inhibitor Ac-zVAD-fmk, and may
be similar to BNIP3-induced cell death. BNIP3-mediated cell death also
resembles the caspase- and Apaf-1-independent cell death in the
interdigital spaces of mouse limb buds, including mottled nuclei and
cytoplasmic vacuolation (4). A morphologically similar form
of caspase-independent cell death has been reported in the slime
mold Dictyostelium discoideum, which was also inhibitable by
cyclosporin A (43).
Opening of the PT pore, loss of 
m, and increased ROS production
are important contributors to cellular destruction (63) and
are early events in both apoptosis and necrosis (8,
25). PT pore opening has also been described in several models of
apoptotic cell death as an amplification step that is secondary
to initial caspase activation (2, 12, 34). As noted
earlier, necrotic cell death is similarly characterized by rapid PT
pore opening that can be inhibited by cyclosporin A, which also
effectively blocks cell death (25). BNIP3-induces PT pore
opening with 
m suppression and ROS production occurs concurrently
with plasma membrane permeabilization and is blocked by the PT
pore-specific inhibitors cyclosporin A and bongkrekic acid. Thus, PT
pore opening is a pivotal event for BNIP3-induced cell death. This is
summarized in Fig. 11. In earlier
studies, there remains a controversy as to the sequence of
mitochondrial events in cell death. Zamzami et al. (63)
demonstrated that ROS were generated only after dissipation of 
m
following dexamethasone treatment of splenic T cells. The loss of
mitochondrial membrane potential and ROS production can be both an
inducer and a consequence of PT pore opening depending on the death
signal (8, 26, 65). Considering the mechanism by which BNIP3
affects the PT pore, it may interact either directly or indirectly with
components of the pore, resulting in its opening. Alternatively, BNIP3
may target another protein that suppresses transmembrane potential and
induces ROS production, which secondarily opens the PT pore. Thus,
although PT pore opening is a key mechanism that mediates BNIP3-induced
cell death, the specific mitochondrial proteins that are targeted
remain to be identified.

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FIG. 11.
Model of BNIP3-induced cell death. Overexpression
permits integration of BNIP3 into the outer mitochondrial membrane in
an Ncyto-Cin orientation through its TM
domain. BNIP3 then initiates permeability transition pore opening and
 m suppression with increased ROS production in an undefined
sequence, leading to cell death. Late DNA fragmentation and
chromatin condensation are also induced as a consequence of BNIP3
integration via an unidentified pathway.
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|
Based on the observed function of BNIP3 as a mediator of cell death
resembling necrosis when overexpressed, it is reasonable to postulate
that some forms of necrotic cell death may be mediated by endogenous
BNIP3. Recently, increased endogenous BNIP3 mRNA and protein expression
has been observed in HeLa cells grown in hypoxic conditions (K. Guo, G. Searfoss, C. Franks, M. Pagnoni, D. Krolikowsky, K. T. Yu, M. Jaye, K. Clark, and Y. Ivashchenko, Proceedings of the AACR Special
Conference on Programmed Cell Death Regulation, abstract A-56, 2000).
Hypoxia is a well-known inducer of necrotic cell death (8).
Thus, it is interesting to speculate that BNIP3 may play a role in
mediating death associated with hypoxic stress and possibly other forms
of necrotic cell death.
Endogenous BNIP3 protein is abundant in murine and human skeletal
muscle and is not detectable in lysates of all other nonskeletal muscle-bearing tissues and over 15 cell lines, including myoblasts and
differentiated myocytes (D. Dubik and A. H. Greenberg, unpublished data). However, we found that some (e.g., HeLa, 293T, and K562) but not
all (e.g., MCF-7) cell lines have small amounts of BNIP3 protein
detectable in enriched mitochondrial fractions. Endogenous muscle BNIP3
is alkali extractable and thus loosely associated and not
integrated into the mitochondrial membrane, similar to the
observations for endogenous BAX intracellular localization by
Goping et al. (13). When overexpressed, BNIP3 (and
BAX) integrates into the mitochondrial membrane through the C-terminal
transmembrane domain (amino acids 164 to 184) with the orientation of
the protein in an Ncyto-Cin direction. A 17- to
18-kDa portion of the C terminus is detected after trypsin digestion of
mitochondria. This would be consistent with a dimer of two
trypsin-resistant fragments of 8.5 to 9.0 kDa from approximately amino
acids 104 to 194. The Ana40 monoclonal reacts with amino acids 112 to
124, and this epitope is present in the trypsin-resistant fragment. The
question remains how the endogenous BNIP3 remains in an inactive,
nonintegrated state. At least two non-mutually exclusive mechanisms are
possible: (i) endogenous BNIP3 assumes a conformation that prevents
integration of the TM domain until it is altered by some
posttranslational modification, or (ii) endogenous BNIP3 interacts with
a regulatory protein that maintains it in an unintegrated form at the
surface of the mitochondria until it dissociates. Since overexpression induces cell death, BNIP3 is able to overcome this inhibition in high
concentrations, suggesting that the regulatory mechanism is saturable.
Translocation from the cytoplasm to the mitochondria during induction
of apoptosis has been reported for several members of the BCL-2
proapoptotic family, including BID (30, 32), BAX
(13), BAK (15), BAD (9, 64), and BIM
(45). These molecules can be regulated by phosphorylation,
dimerization, or proteolytic cleavage (16). In the absence
of an apoptotic stimulus, BAD is phosphorylated by Akt
(64) and by mitochondrion-anchored protein kinase A
(18) and sequestered in the cytoplasm by 14-3-3 protein
(64). BAX, BAK, and BIM are held inactive in the cytoplasm and are translocated to the mitochondria after a cell death signal. Further regulation is suspected for BAX, which is permitted to integrate into the mitochondrial membrane following proteolytic cleavage of an inhibitory element in the N terminus
(13). Similarly, BID is cleaved by caspase 8 following
Fas ligation, resulting in mitochondrial translocation (30,
32). Whether endogenous BNIP3 translocation to the mitochondrial
membrane is regulated by a posttranslational mechanism similar to these
proteins remains to be determined.
In conclusion, we have shown that BNIP3 overexpression initiates a cell
death pathway that is activated by protein integration into the outer
mitochondrial membrane. This pathway requires PT pore opening and is
independent of caspases, Apaf-1, and cytochrome c
release. Cell death manifests as mitochondrial dysfunction, plasma
membrane damage, and the morphology of necrosis.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
C. Vande Velde and J. Cizeau contributed equally to this study.
We thank Peter Nickerson, Geoff Hicks, Ed Rector, and Guangming Zhong
of the University of Manitoba for their assistance with flow cytometry
and confocal laser microscopy, as well as Eileen MacMillan-Ward for
electron microscopy preparations. We are especially grateful to Emad
Alnemri, Guido Kroemer, Yuri Lazebnik, Josef Penninger, Xiaodong Wang,
Junying Yuan, and J. A. Duine for their kind gift of reagents and
Spencer Gibson for reviewing the manuscript and providing 293-Bcl-2
cells. We also thank Laurie Lange, Elizabeth Henson, and Angela Kemp
for their excellent technical assistance and all members of the A.H.G.
lab for helpful discussions.
This work was supported by the National Cancer Institute of Canada with
funds from the Terry Fox Run and the Medical Research Council of Canada.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Manitoba
Institute of Cell Biology, University of Manitoba, 100 Olivia Street,
Winnipeg, MB R3E 0V9, Canada. Phone: (204) 787-2112. Fax: (204)
787-2190. E-mail: agreenb{at}cc.umanitoba.ca.
 |
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