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Molecular and Cellular Biology, January 2004, p. 730-740, Vol. 24, No. 2
0270-7306/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.24.2.730-740.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics,1 Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60607,2 Veterans Administration Chicago Healthcare System, Chicago, Illinois 606123
Received 7 July 2003/ Returned for modification 18 August 2003/ Accepted 27 October 2003
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Compromised mitochondrial integrity, with the consequent release of apoptogenic factors such as cytochrome c, is critical for the progression of the intrinsic apoptotic program in mammalian cells (reviewed in references 29 and 36). Akt has been shown to inhibit mitochondrial cytochrome c release but to be unable to prevent apoptosis following microinjection of cytochrome c into cells (21). Akt has also been shown to inhibit molecular events that precede cytochrome c release (18), suggesting that Akt inhibits apoptosis by maintaining the integrity of mitochondria.
It has been demonstrated that members of the Bcl-2 protein family are critical regulators of mitochondrial integrity. An apoptotic stimulus may activate one or more of the "BH3-only" proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, which proceed to directly or indirectly activate one or both of the terminal Bcl-2 family death effectors BAX and BAK at the mitochondria (reviewed in reference 33). The antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family members, Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL, directly antagonize the activity of the BH3-only proteins. Akt has also been shown to negatively regulate, directly or indirectly, the activity of several proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family. It has been reported that Akt can phosphorylate and directly inhibit the activity of the BH3-only protein BAD (12, 13), as well as the forkhead homology transcription factor FoxO3a/FKHR-L1. FoxO3a has been shown to induce the expression of the BH3-only Bcl-2 family member BIM (14) and the Fas death receptor ligand (FasL) (8). FasL activates a signal transduction cascade leading to the cleavage and activation of the BH3-only protein BID by caspase 8. Akt can also inhibit apoptosis induced by overexpression of BAX and BAK, as well as by overexpression of the BH3-only Bcl-2 family member BIK, by an unknown mechanism (21).
Our previous results suggest that Akt elevates mitochondrial hexokinase (mtHK) association and activity at the mitochondria and requires active mtHK to inhibit apoptosis (18). Hexokinase (HK) catalyzes the phosphorylation of glucose to yield glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P), which constitutes the first committed step of glucose metabolism. Mammalian cells express up to three high-affinity HK isoforms, two of which, HKI and HKII, associate with the cytoplasmic face of the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM). An amino-terminal hydrophobic domain found only in HKI and HKII mediates this interaction. HKI and possibly HKII also bind to the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) (reviewed in references 38 and 39). More recently, HKII has been shown to inhibit the mitochondrial binding of BAX (30). We have thus been examining the possibility that Akt regulates mitochondrion-associated proteins, such as HKs, which may antagonize the activation of BAX and BAK at the mitochondria following an apoptotic insult, thereby maintaining mitochondrial integrity and preventing the release of apoptogenic factors. If Akt promotes cell survival by regulating a single mitochondrion-associated protein, it is possible that Akt mainly prevents the release of apoptogenic factors by a single, universal mechanism rather than by independently inhibiting the activation of individual proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members.
In the present studies, we have used BID-mediated apoptosis as a model to evaluate the hypothesis that Akt inhibits apoptosis and the release of apoptogenic factors from mitochondria by maintaining favorable association between HKs and mitochondria. BID requires proteolytic processing to generate its mitochondrially localized form truncated BID (tBID), which compromises mitochondrial integrity via activation and oligomerization of BAX and BAK at the mitochondria (33). We show that activated Akt, like Bcl-2, inhibits BAX activation and BAK oligomerization following BID cleavage. This activity of Akt is dependent on the availability of glucose and can be mimicked by ectopic expression of mitochondrially bound catalytically active HKII.
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Cell culture and gene transfer.
Rat1a fibroblasts, stable polyclonal derivatives expressing mAkt or Bcl-2, and corresponding control cell lines were established and maintained as described previously (21). Polyclonal cell populations stably infected with the pBabe-eGFP-BID retrovirus or a pBabe-eGFP retrovirus control were generated and selected as previously described (21). Polyclonal cell populations stably expressing NHKII-GFP were generated by infection with pLPCX-NHKII-GFP retrovirus followed by selection with puromycin as previously described (21). In transient-transfection experiments involving pBabe-eGFP-tBID, the use of concentrated retroviral preparations resulted in
90% transfection efficiency as determined by GFP reporter gene expression (21).
Induction of apoptosis. For growth factor deprivation experiments, apoptosis was induced by rinsing cells with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) before placing them in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) without serum. For glucose deprivation experiments, cells were rinsed with PBS and placed in glucose-free DMEM (Gibco BRL) supplemented with 1 mM pyruvate and 1 mM methyl pyruvate, with or without 10% dialyzed glucose-free fetal calf serum (FCS; Atlanta Biologicals). For tBID-induced apoptosis, cells were infected with a minimal dilution of concentrated pBabe-eGFP-tBID retrovirus, which transduces the cells with about 95% efficiency, as determined by measuring the percentage of GFP-positive cells. Cells for all experiments were seeded at a density of 5 x 104 cells/35-mm-diameter plate overnight.
DAPI and immunofluorescence staining. For 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride hydrate (DAPI) staining, cells were fixed by the addition of formaldehyde solution directly to the medium on the plates. For immunofluorescent cytochrome c staining, cells were rinsed once with PBS and fixed with in 4% paraformaldehyde-PBS. DAPI staining and immunofluorescent cytochrome c staining were performed as previously described (21) using anti-cytochrome c (6H2.B4; BD Pharmingen) and tetramethyl rhodamine isocyanate-labeled anti-mouse secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch). For immunofluorescence with conformation-specific BAX antibodies (19), cells were fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde-PBS for 15 min and incubated overnight with an anti-BAX antibody (1:400; 6A7; BD Pharmingen) in 500 µg of digitonin-PBS/ml at 4°C. Cells were rinsed with PBS, incubated with fluorescent secondary antibodies diluted 1:200 in 1% bovine serum albumin-PBS for 1 h before mounting. For detection of NHKII-GFP in Rat1a fibroblasts, cells were fixed as described for cytochrome c staining and GFP fluorescence was analyzed by confocal microscopy.
Western blot analysis. Cells were harvested and lysed either by serial freeze-thaw cycles or directly in 2x Laemmli buffer. Whole-cell lysates were routinely denatured in 1x Laemmli buffer and resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) before transfer to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and immunoblot analysis using anti-BID (AF860 and MAB860; R&D Systems) and anti-ß-actin (A5441; Sigma) antibodies. For the HKII Western blotting, cells or mitochondria were lysed in 1x Laemmli buffer, resolved by SDS-8% PAGE, transferred to a 0.45-µm-pore-size nitrocellulose membrane, and blotted with an HKII rabbit polyclonal antibody (provided by John Wilson, Michigan State University, East Lansing).
BAK oligomerization assay. The BAK oligomerization assay was adapted from a previously described methodology (37). Briefly, cells were mechanically lysed as previously described (21), and the mitochondrially enriched fractions were subjected to protein cross-linking by incubation in freshly prepared 10 mM bismaleimidohexane (Pierce)-16.8% dimethyl sulfoxide-PBS for 30 min at room temperature, with occasional mixing. Samples were boiled for 5 min in 1x Laemmli buffer, resolved by SDS-10% PAGE, blotted on nitrocellulose membranes by semidry transfer, and subjected to Western blot analysis using an anti-BAK antibody (06-536; Upstate Biotechnology). Nonspecific bands were identified by comparison with un-cross-linked control samples examined in parallel.
HK activity assay.
HK activity was measured by a standard G-6-P dehydrogenase-coupled spectrophotometric assay as described previously (18) with minor modifications. Whole-cell lysates were prepared by brief sonication (15 s) in homogenization buffer consisting of 45 mM Tris-HCl, 50 mM KH2PO4, 10 mM glucose, and 0.5 mM EGTA, pH 8.2. In parallel, mitochondrion-enriched fractions were prepared from identical, paired cells resuspended in 250 mM sucrose-20 mM Tris-HCl-1 mM EGTA, pH 7.4, via mechanical lysis and differential centrifugation as described previously (18). Protein concentrations were uniformly determined for both whole-cell and mitochondrion-enriched samples by the method of Bradford using commercially available reagents and standards (Bio-Rad). HK activity was measured as the total glucose-phosphorylating capacity of whole-cell lysates or mitochondrion-enriched fractions in a final assay mixture containing 50 mM triethanolammine chloride, 7.5 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM EGTA, 11 mM monothioglycerol, 4 mM glucose, 6.6 mM ATP, 0.5 mg of NADP/ml, and 0.5 U of yeast G-6-P dehydrogenase (Sigma)/ml, pH 8.5. HK activity in each sample was calculated as the coupled rate of NADPH formation by the Lambert-Beer law: [(
A340/
t)/
] x dilution factor/[protein], where
(6.22 mM-1cm-1) is the extinction coefficient for NADPH at 340 nm, t is time, and [protein] is the protein concentration. Percent mtHK activity was calculated from the formula [(mtHK activity x mitochondrial protein/total cellular protein)/whole-cell HK activity] x 100.
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FIG. 1. BID cleavage is induced by growth factor withdrawal and is required for BID-accelerated apoptosis in the absence of growth factors. (A) Rat1a fibroblasts or Rat1a fibroblasts overexpressing mAkt (Rat1a-mAkt) or Bcl-2 (Rat1a-Bcl-2) were deprived of serum for 24 h. At different times following serum deprivation BID cleavage was monitored by immunoblotting using an anti-BID antibody (MAB860; R&D Systems). end. BID, endogenous BID. (B) Greater quantities of some of the samples from panel A were run on a new gel, and the appearance of tBID was monitored by immunoblotting using an antibody more sensitive for tBID (AF860; R&D Systems). (C) Kinetics of apoptosis of Rat1a cells overexpressing BID, BID(D59E), or vector control following serum withdrawal. Apoptosis was scored as described in Materials and Methods. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for four independent experiments.
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FIG. 2. Activated Akt, like Bcl-2, inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome c release and apoptosis following BID cleavage. (A) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 fibroblasts stably overexpressing BID were deprived of serum, and BID cleavage was monitored by immunoblotting using anti-BID and anti-tBID antibodies. ex. BID, exogenous BID. (B) Kinetics of apoptosis following serum deprivation in cell lines overexpressing BID. (C) Kinetics of cytochrome c release following serum deprivation in cell lines overexpressing BID. The experiment was performed as in panel B, except that cells were fixed and immunofluorescence for cytochrome c was performed. Cells exhibiting an extramitochondrial, diffuse pattern of cytochrome c staining were scored positive for cytochrome c release as described in Materials and Methods. (D) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cell lines were infected with tBID-expressing retrovirus, as described in Materials and Methods, and apoptosis was quantitated, as for panel B, 12 and 18 h postinfection. Apoptosis was quantitated as for panel B. (E) Cytochrome c was quantitated following infection with retrovirus expressing tBID. The experiment was performed as for panel C, except cells were infected in the presence of 100 µM caspase inhibitor zVAD. Cells were fixed and immunofluorescence for cytochrome c was performed. Cells exhibiting an extramitochondrial, diffuse pattern of cytochrome c staining were scored positive for cytochrome c release. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for three independent experiments.
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To further evaluate the possibility that mAkt inhibits apoptosis following BID cleavage, we examined if mAkt, like Bcl-2, could inhibit apoptosis induced by overexpression of tBID. We transiently infected cells with a high-titer retrovirus expressing tBID and monitored apoptosis and cytochrome c release (see Materials and Methods). tBID induced rapid and robust apoptosis, even in the presence of 10% FCS. This effect was attenuated by mAkt, although to a lesser extent than by Bcl-2 (Fig. 2D). Activated Akt also inhibited tBID-induced mitochondrial cytochrome c release (Fig. 2E). zVAD was added in the tBID-mediated cytochrome c release experiments because ectopic tBID does not require caspase activity to become activated. Infection with vector control retrovirus did not induce apoptosis or cytochrome c release.
Activated Akt inhibits BAK oligomerization and BAX activation. tBID has been shown to translocate to the mitochondria and initiate the release of cytochrome c by activation of BAX and/or BAK (33). We therefore analyzed the effect of mAkt on BAX and BAK activation. Oligomerization of BAX and/or BAK elicited by tBID at the mitochondria is thought to play a pivotal role in the induction of cytochrome c release (37). Because growth factor deprivation induced BID cleavage (Fig. 1A and 2A), it was expected that growth factor deprivation would be sufficient to induce BAK oligomerization. Indeed, BAK oligomerization followed growth factor withdrawal and was attenuated by both mAkt and Bcl-2 (Fig. 3A). Nonspecific bands were identified by comparison to parallel samples without addition of protein cross-linker. BID overexpression accelerated and amplified BAK oligomerization following growth factor deprivation (Fig. 3B), which is consistent with BID activation downstream of growth factor withdrawal. Furthermore, tBID overexpression induced a robust BAK oligomerization, which was also attenuated by mAkt (Fig. 3C).
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FIG. 3. Activated Akt attenuates growth factor withdrawal and BID-induced BAK oligomerization. (A) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cell lines were deprived of serum and mitochondrion-enriched fractions were isolated at different times after serum deprivation. The isolated mitochondrial fractions were subjected to protein cross-linking with bismaleimidohexane. Following cross-linking mitochondria were lysed and subjected to Western blot analysis using anti-BAK antibodies. Oligomerization of BAK was monitored by the appearance of higher-molecular-weight species consistent with BAK dimers and trimers, as well as by the disappearance of BAK monomers. (B) The same experiment as in panel A, except that cell lines overexpressing BID were used. (C) BAK oligomerization assay was performed 13 h after infection of Rat1a and Rat1a-mAkt cells with tBID- or control GFP-expressing retrovirus. Arrowheads, oligomers; asterisks, nonspecific bands.
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FIG. 4. Activated Akt inhibits tBID-induced BAX activation. (A) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cell lines were infected with control or tBID-expressing retrovirus for 12 or 16 h in the presence of 100 µM zVAD, and immunofluorescence using conformation-specific anti-BAX antibodies was performed following infection. Representative fields for all three cell lines are presented. (B) Quantitation of cells displaying BAX activation, as visualized in panel A. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for three independent experiments.
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FIG. 5. Glucose is required for optimal inhibition of apoptosis by growth factors and mAkt. (A) Kinetics of apoptosis of Rat1a cells deprived of serum and/or glucose in the presence of 1 mM each methyl pyruvate and pyruvate. (B) Kinetics of apoptosis of Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cell lines overexpressing BID in the absence of both serum and glucose and in the presence of 1 mM each methyl pyruvate and pyruvate. (C) Protection from apoptosis provided by mAkt in the presence or absence of glucose. Protection was determined at time points when Rat1a BID-overexpressing cells exhibited more than 10%, but less than 50%, apoptosis, by calculating the average level of protection from results for multiple individual experiments. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for three independent experiments.
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FIG. 6. mtHK dissociation and BAK oligomerization are induced by glucose withdrawal and tBID overexpression and are inhibited by mAkt. (A) Rat1a and Rat1a-mAkt cells were deprived of serum and were harvested, and the fractional HK activity associated with mitochondria was determined enzymatically (see Materials and Methods) prior to and after serum deprivation. (B) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cells were deprived of glucose in the presence of 10% FCS and 1 mM each methyl pyruvate and pyruvate for 24 and 48 h, and apoptosis was quantitated by DAPI staining. (C) Rat1a and Rat1a-mAkt cells were deprived of glucose in the presence of 10% FCS and 1 mM each methyl pyruvate and pyruvate for 30 h. Cells were harvested, and percent mtHK activity was determined. (D) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cells were withdrawn from glucose, in the presence of 10% FCS and 1 mM each methyl pyruvate and pyruvate for 30 h. A BAK cross-linking assay was performed as described for Fig. 3. (E) Rat1a, Rat1a-mAkt, and Rat1a-Bcl-2 cells were infected with either vector control or tBID-expressing retrovirus for 10 h. Cells were harvested, and percent mtHK activity was determined. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for at least three independent experiments. *, P > 0.05; **, P = 0.067 (not significant).
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FIG. 7. Overexpression of mitochondrially bound HKII inhibits tBID-mediated apoptosis and BAX activation. (A) Whole-cell extracts (lanes 1 and 2) and mitochondrially enriched fractions (lanes 3 and 4) of a polyclonal Rat1a fibroblast cell line stably overexpressing the N-terminal, mitochondrially bound catalytic half of HKII (lanes 2 and 4) and parental Rat1a fibroblasts (lanes 1 and 3) were analyzed for expression of endogenous (end.) HKII and exogenous NHKII by immunoblotting with anti-HKII antibodies. Asterisks, nonspecific bands. (B) Confocal image of GFP fluorescence and the corresponding Nomarski image of Rat1a cells stably overexpressing NHKII-GFP. (C) Polyclonal Rat1a fibroblasts stably overexpressing the N-terminal, mitochondrially bound catalytic half of HKII and parental Rat1a fibroblasts were infected with tBID-expressing retrovirus, and apoptosis was quantitated by DAPI staining 16 h postinfection. (D) Experiment performed as for panel A, except that cells were fixed 12 and 16 h postinfection and immunofluorescence staining for activated BAX was performed. All data are depicted graphically as the means ± standard errors of the means for three independent experiments.
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We showed that activated Akt could inhibit mitochondrial cytochrome c release and apoptosis following BID cleavage and overexpression of tBID (Fig. 2), suggesting that Akt delivers an antiapoptotic signal to the mitochondria to antagonize the proapoptotic signal delivered by tBID. We also found that activated Akt could inhibit tBID-induced activation of BAX and oligomerization of BAK, events that appear to be critical and necessary for tBID-mediated release of apoptogenic factors from the mitochondria (reviewed in reference 33). In addition, growth factor withdrawal alone was sufficient to induce BAK oligomerization, an effect reversed by overexpression of activated Akt. Also, overexpression of BID accelerated and enhanced growth factor withdrawal-induced BAK oligomerization, demonstrating that BID is a downstream effector of growth factor withdrawal-mediated apoptosis (Fig. 3 and 4). Taken together, these results suggest that Akt intervenes in the apoptotic cascade following BID activation at the level of the mitochondria, upstream of cytochrome c release.
We went further to demonstrate the importance of glucose and mtHK activity for Akt to effectively deliver an antiapoptotic signal. In our experimental system, mtHK activity provides a reasonable estimate of mtHK association, so we were in effect measuring the amount of HK present at the mitochondria. Glucose withdrawal, even in the presence of supplemental pyruvate as an alternate mitochondrial energy substrate, greatly accelerated the kinetics of apoptosis following growth factor withdrawal, illustrating the central importance of glucose in the promotion of cell survival. Glucose deprivation markedly reduced the antiapoptotic potential of Akt following growth factor withdrawal in BID-overexpressing cells (Fig. 5). Consistent with previous reports (18, 31), the ability of Bcl-2 to inhibit BID-induced apoptosis was not hindered by the absence of glucose, suggesting that Akt and Bcl-2 inhibit apoptosis via distinct mechanisms. Growth factor deprivation decreased mitochondrion-HK association, but a relatively high level of association is maintained in cells expressing activated Akt (18) (Fig. 6A). Moreover, glucose deprivation alone inhibited growth factor-mediated cell survival and decreased mitochondrion-HK association in both control cells and cells expressing activated Akt, with a concomitant increase in mitochondrial BAK oligomerization (Figs. 6B to D). Akt is known to promote glucose uptake into the cell, so it is possible that Akt promotes mtHK association by increasing intracellular glucose levels. Interestingly, tBID overexpression also decreased HK association with the mitochondria, prior to onset of apoptosis, suggesting that the decreased association is a cause, rather than a consequence, of apoptosis. Overexpression of tBID also decreased, to some extent, the ability of Akt to maintain mitochondrion-HK association (Fig. 6E). Again, even though mtHK association was decreased in the presence of activated Akt, the higher basal mtHK association in activated Akt-expressing cells assured that mtHK levels did not decrease to the level observed in control cells. If mtHK is an important antiapoptotic determinant, elevated mtHK activity could explain why activated Akt-expressing cells are more resistant to tBID-mediated apoptosis. Perhaps the strongest piece of evidence demonstrating the antiapoptotic activity of mtHK is our result showing that cells overexpressing the catalytic amino terminus half of mtHKII could also inhibit tBID-mediated apoptosis (Fig. 7). Our previous results suggest that a catalytically active HK is required to promote inhibition of apoptosis by Akt (18). It would be, therefore, interesting to determine if catalytically inactive, or mitochondrion-binding-deficient, variants of HK are able to inhibit apoptosis, and this will be the focus of future experimentation.
How could mtHK inhibit apoptosis? As indicated above mtHKs are associated with the OMM and HKI, and possibly HKII, also interact with VDAC, which is located at the contact sites between the OMM and the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) (1, 6, 7). This association affords mtHK "privileged access" to mitochondrial ATP, facilitates direct coupling between glucose phosphorylation and oxidative phosphorylation via ADP-ATP exchange across the mitochondrial membranes, and may provide kinetic advantages to mtHK (reviewed in references 38 and 39). In cells, mitochondrion-HK association (3, 4, 34), as well as the VDAC open state (10, 27), are dynamic processes, modulated by intracellular metabolites at physiologically relevant levels. For example, G-6-P accumulation promotes dissociation of HK from the OMM (34), which is theoretically reversible when G-6-P levels decline, as a result of its consumption in glycolysis. It was shown that HKII, when bound to mitochondria, could prevent access of BAX to the OMM (30). Our results show a correlation between mitochondrion-HK association and BAX activation and BAK oligomerization on the OMM. Thus, it is possible that the physiological and dynamic HK association with and dissociation from mitochondria restricts the ability of BAX/BAK to accumulate and oligomerize on the OMM. Prolonged dissociation of HK from the OMM may promote unrestricted access of BAX and BAK oligomers to critical sites on the OMM, whereas prolonged association of HK with the OMM (when Akt is activated) may restrict BAX and BAK access to these sites. These critical sites could be the contact sites, which are enriched in both HKs and the charged phospholipid cardiolipin (2, 39). The presence of cardiolipin on the OMM, which was reported to be required for tBID localization at the mitochondria, as well as for BAX/BAK-mediated cytochrome c release, is restricted to contact sites (15, 23, 25, 26). mtHKs may prevent tBID from binding to the cardiolipin-rich contact sites and indirectly inhibit tBID-dependent mitochondrial accumulation and activation of BAX/BAK, although this is presently speculative. Likewise, mtHKs, which are 100-kDa proteins that, it has been proposed, exist as tetramers on the OMM in close proximity with VDAC and contact sites (5, 40), may thus sterically hinder BAX and BAK access to cardiolipin-enriched contact sites. An essential cardiolipin requirement for BAX/BAK-mediated macromolecular diffusion through OMM pores is compatible with this contention (23). Our results showing that tBID elicits dissociation of HK from mitochondria (Fig. 6E) suggest that HK and tBID and/or BAX/BAK compete for binding and accumulation at the OMM.
An alternative, not necessarily mutually exclusive, possibility exists. In mammalian cells the association of HKI with the OMM and VDAC has been implicated in the regulation of permeability transition pore and possibly VDAC closure (5). VDAC is thought to normally flicker between open and closed conformations to facilitate the transport of adenine nucleotides and respiratory substrates across the mitochondrial membranes while maintaining proper mitochondrial homeostasis (10, 27). It has been suggested that deregulation of VDAC function occurs following apoptotic insults. Previous observations imply that VDAC becomes "locked" in a closed conformation following growth factor withdrawal, possibly as a result of prolonged dissociation of mtHKs from VDAC (16-18, 35). VDAC closure may lead to transient hyperpolarization, and possibly remodeling of the IMM, which can be prevented by Akt (18). IMM remodeling may promote increased access of cytochrome c to the OMM, as well as dissociation of cytochrome c from the IMM side of the intermembrane space, where it is anchored by cardiolipin (28, 32). These effects on the IMM would enable more-efficient release of cytochrome c through the OMM by BAX and BAK.
In summary, we have demonstrated that BID is cleaved and activated following growth factor withdrawal and that the antiapoptotic effect of Akt occurs following BID cleavage. Furthermore, our data suggest that Akt delivers its antiapoptotic signal by elevating the association of HK with the mitochondria, which antagonizes the ability of BAX and BAK to accumulate and oligomerize at the mitochondria.
This work was supported by NIH grants AG16927 and CA90764 (N.H.) and by NIH training grant T32DK007739-06 (N.M.).
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