NBK/BIK antagonizes MCL-1 and BCL-XL and activates BAK-mediated apoptosis in response to protein synthesis inhibition

  1. Tsutomu Shimazu1,
  2. Kurt Degenhardt2,
  3. Alam Nur-E-Kamal1,
  4. Junjie Zhang1,
  5. Takeshi Yoshida1,
  6. Yonglong Zhang1,
  7. Robin Mathew2,
  8. Eileen White2,3,5, and
  9. Masayori Inouye1,4
  1. 1 Department of Biochemistry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA;
  2. 2 Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA;
  3. 3 Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08903, USA

Abstract

Ribonucleases, antibiotics, bacterial toxins, and viruses inhibit protein synthesis, which results in apoptosis in mammalian cells. How the BCL-2 family of proteins regulates apoptosis in response to the shutoff of protein synthesis is not known. Here we demonstrate that an Escherichia coli toxin, MazF, inhibited protein synthesis by cleavage of cellular mRNA and induced apoptosis in mammalian cells. MazF-induced apoptosis required proapoptotic BAK and its upstream regulator, the proapoptotic BH3-only protein NBK/BIK, but not BIM, PUMA, or NOXA. Interestingly, in response to MazF induction, NBK/BIK activated BAK by displacing it from anti-apoptotic proteins MCL-1 and BCL-XL that sequester BAK. Furthermore, NBK/BIK- or BAK-deficient cells were resistant to cell death induced by pharmacologic inhibition of translation and by virus-mediated shutoff of protein synthesis. Thus, the BH3-only protein NBK/BIK is the apical regulator of a BAK-dependent apoptotic pathway in response to shutoff of protein synthesis that functions to displace BAK from sequestration by MCL1 and BCL-XL. Although NBK/BIK is dispensable for development, it is the BH3-only protein targeted for inactivation by viruses, suggesting that it plays a role in pathogen/toxin response through apoptosis activation.

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Footnotes

  • 4 Corresponding authors.

    4 E-MAIL inouye{at}umdnj.edu; FAX (732) 235-4559.

  • 5 E-MAIL ewhite{at}cabm.rutgers.edu; FAX (732) 235-5759.

  • Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1522007

    • Received December 11, 2006.
    • Accepted February 23, 2007.
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