New component of death machinery revealed

New component of death machinery revealed

An important component of the microscopic machinery that drives cell death has been identified by the scientists.

Studying the 'pro-death' machinery that forces damaged, diseased or unwanted cells to die, the research team revealed a protein called VDAC2 was critical for the function of a key pro-death protein called Bax. The team also showed VDAC2 contributed to the killing of certain cancer cells by anti-cancer agents. The research was published in the journal Nature Communications,.

Apoptotic cell death is critical for the development and maintenance of our body, and faults in the protein machinery that drives apoptosis have been linked to a range of diseases. Faulty cell death proteins have been linked to both the development of cancer, as well as resistance of cancer cells to treatment.

A key protein in the cell death machinery is called Bax. Bax helps to take a cell to a 'point of no return' when apoptotic cell death is triggered, forming pores in mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell. This unleashes the final 'executioner' proteins that dismantle a cell.

The team investigated how Bax and a related protein called Bak kill cells, knocking out the function of different genes using CRISPR technology. "To our surprise we discovered a gene that was essential for the function of Bax but not Bak, despite these two proteins being functionally and structurally very similar.

"We were able to follow up on this research to show that the protein, called VDAC2, was a catalyst that helped Bax associate with mitochondria and form pores in their membranes, to kill the cell,"  the senior author said. "Intriguingly VDAC2's 'day job' is to maintain the function of the mitochondria, pumping metabolites in and out of the mitochondria."

A failure of the cell death machinery is a hallmark of cancer cells, and is linked to the resistance of cancer cells to anti-cancer treatments, said another author. Bax is important for helping anti-cancer agents kill cells - without Bax and its relative Bak, cancer cells cannot undergo apoptosis when treated with a range of anti-cancer therapies.

"Our research showed that VDAC2 is required for Bax to drive the response of cancer cells to conventional chemotherapy agents as well as the recently developed BH3-mimetics," the author said.

https://www.wehi.edu.au/news/fine-tuning-cell-death-new-component-death-machinery-revealed
 

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-07309-4

http://sciencemission.com/site/index.php?page=news&type=view&id=publications%2Fvdac2-enables-bax-to&filter=22

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