Cell 1996 Nov
Zha J, Harada H, Yang E, Jockel J, Korsmeyer SJ
Abstract
Extracellular survival factors alter a cell's susceptibility to apoptosis, often through posttranslational mechanisms. However, no consistent relationship has been established between such survival signals and the BCL-2 family, where the balance of death agonists versus antagonists determines susceptibility. One distant member, BAD, heterodimerizes with BCL-X(L) or BCL-2, neutralizing their protective effect and promoting cell death. In the presence of survival factor IL-3, cells phosphorylated
...[more]BAD on two serine residues embedded in 14-3-3 consensus binding sites. Only the nonphosphorylated BAD heterodimerized with BCL-X(L) at membrane sites to promote cell death. Phosphorylated BAD was sequestered in the cytosol bound to 14-3-3. Substitution of serine phosphorylation sites further enhanced BAD's death-promoting activity. The rapid phosphorylation of BAD following IL-3 connects a proximal survival signal with the BCL-2 family, modulating this checkpoint for apoptosis.
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Mesh Headings:
14-3-3 Proteins, Amino Acid Sequence, Carrier Proteins, Cell Death, Cell Survival, Cytosol, Dimerization, Interleukin-3, Membranes, Models, Biological, Molecular Sequence Data, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding, Proteins, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2, Serine, Signal Transduction, Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase, bcl-Associated Death Protein, bcl-X Protein