| Literature DB >> 11516343 |
A M Verhagen1, E J Coulson, D L Vaux.
Abstract
SUMMARY: Apoptosis is a physiological cell death process important for development, homeostasis and the immune defence of multicellular animals. The key effectors of apoptosis are caspases, cysteine proteases that cleave after aspartate residues. The inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family of proteins prevent cell death by binding to and inhibiting active caspases and are negatively regulated by IAP-binding proteins, such as the mammalian protein DIABLO/Smac. IAPs are characterized by the presence of one to three domains known as baculoviral IAP repeat (BIR) domains and many also have a RING-finger domain at their carboxyl terminus. More recently, a second group of BIR-domain-containing proteins (BIRPs) have been identified that includes the mammalian proteins Bruce and Survivin as well as BIR-containing proteins in yeasts and Caenorhabditis elegans. These Survivin-like BIRPs regulate cytokinesis and mitotic spindle formation. In this review, we describe the IAPs and other BIRPs, their evolutionary relationships and their subcellular and tissue localizations.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11516343 PMCID: PMC139420 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2001-2-7-reviews3009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1Structure and evolution of BIRPs. (a) Domain structures of BIRPs in mammals (humans), insects, nematodes and yeast. The length of each protein (in amino acids) is shown on the right. IAPs have type 1 BIR domains (dark blue), whereas type 2 BIR domains (light blue) are found in Survivin-like BIRPs. (b) The evolutionary relationship of BIR domains. A phylogenetic tree was generated using the parsimony option of the PHYLIP Phylogeny Inference Package (version 3.5c) [72], from BIR domains aligned by the Clustal W1.7 program. The accession numbers and regions used in the analysis are shown in Table 2. Default settings were used; the order of the sequences was jumbled 10 times and the degree of certainty for each node (the bootstrap value, shown on the Figure) was calculated from 100 random replicates. All bootstrap values greater than 50 and selected others are shown. The values for placement of ML-IAP with NAIP BIR3 and BIR2 domains are very low, and trees calculated using distance methods placed ML-IAP BIR with the BIR3 domains of XIAP, cIAP-1 and cIAP-2. Also, note that the alignment used to generate this tree does not include the carboxy-terminal α-helical extension that is conserved between the BIR3 domains of XIAP, cIAP-1, cIAP-2 and ML-IAP but not NAIP. (c) Two types of BIR domain. An alignment of a selection of BIR domains illustrates the difference between BIR domains present within classical IAPs (top four sequences) and within other BIRPs (bottom four). Aligned regions are as given in Table 2. Amino acids that are conserved in all BIR domains are highlighted. Type 1 BIR domains are approximately 70 amino acids long, whereas type 2 BIR domains are longer.
Properties of human BIRPs
| Human BIRPs and | Size (kDa) | Map position | Expression of mRNA | Diseases associated with | References |
| alternative names | of gene | chromosomal rearrangements, | |||
| gene amplification or deletion | |||||
| XIAP/MIHA/ | 57 | Xq25 | Detected in all adult tissues examined | [ | |
| hILP/BIRC4 | |||||
| cIAP-1/MIHB/ | 70 | 11q22-q23 | Detected in all adult tissues examined, | [ | |
| HIAP2/BIRC2 | with highest levels in thymus, testis | ||||
| and ovary | |||||
| cIAP-2/MIHC/ | 68 | 11q22-q23 | Detected in all adult tissues examined, | In marginal zone cell lymphomas of | [ |
| HIAP1/BIRC3 | with highest levels in spleen and | the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, | |||
| thymus | |||||
| rearranged together with the novel gene | |||||
| fusion | |||||
| LIVIN/ML-IAP/ | 31 | 20q13.3 | Detected in embryonic tissue | The region is frequently amplified in | [ |
| KIAP/BIRC7 | and some adult tissues. | melanomas, colon, lung and colorectal | |||
| Elevated levels in cancer cell | malignancies | ||||
| lines, particularly melanoma cell lines | |||||
| NAIP/BIRC1 | 156 | 5q13.1 | Detected only in liver and placenta | Deletions of the | [ |
| (6 genes) | by northern blot analysis but was | in individuals with spinal muscular atrophy | |||
| detected in spinal cord mRNA by | but deletions in the nearby gene SMN are | ||||
| RT-PCR | the most likely cause of disease | ||||
| Survivin/BIRC5 | 17 | 17q25 | Cell-cycle-dependent expression, | [ | |
| restricted to tissues in which there are | |||||
| dividing cells; for example, embryonic | |||||
| tissue, solid tumors and transformed | |||||
| cell lines. Expression is absent from | |||||
| most normal adult tissue | |||||
| BRUCE/BIRC6 | 528 | 2p21-p22 | Expression of mRNA is detectable in | [ | |
| most adult tissues, with high levels in | |||||
| brain and kidney |
Accession numbers of BIRPs shown in Figure 1b and regions used in the phylogenetic analysis
| Protein name | Accession number | Amino acid residues used for each BIR domain | Species |
| (GenBank) | |||
| XIAP | P98170 | BIR1 21-93, BIR2 159-230, BIR3 258-330 | Human |
| cIAP-1 | XP_006266 | BIR1 41-113, BIR2 179-250, BIR3 264-336 | Human |
| cIAP-2 | XP_006267 | BIR1 24-96, BIR2 164-235, BIR3 250-322 | Human |
| ML-IAP | NP_071444 | BIR 82-154 | Human |
| NAIP | NP_004527 | BIR1 55-127, BIR2 154-227, BIR3 273-345 | Human |
| Survivin | XP_008623 | BIR 10-87 | Human |
| Bruce | NP_031592 | BIR1 256-333 | Human |
| DIAP1 | AAF49548 | BIR1 39-110, BIR2 221-293 | Drosophila |
| DIAP2 | Q24307 | BIR1 4-76, BIR2 108-179, BIR3 207-279 | |
| dBRUCE | AAF54520 | BIR1 243-320 | |
| Deterin | AAF55399 | BIR1 22-100 | Drosophila |
| SfIAP | AAF35285 | BIR1 95-166, BIR2 205-277 | |
| OpIAP | NP_046191 | BIR1 13-84, BIR2 106-178 | |
| CpIAP | P41436 | BIR1 2-73, BIR2 103-175 | |
| CiIAP | P47732 | BIR1 32-108 | Chilo iridescent virus |
| AcIAP | D36828 | BIR1 24-96,BIR2 126-199 | |
| OpBIRP2 | NP_046197 | BIR1 19-91, BIR2 121-193 | |
| BmBIRP | NP_047432 | BIR1 24-96, BIR2 125-199 | |
| CeBIRP2/ CeBIR-2 | U72208 | BIR1 18-97, BIR2 162-240 | |
| CeBIRP1/ CeBIR-1 | T37471 | BIR 12-86 | |
| Spbir1P | T41649 | BIR1 17-98,BIR2 122-193 | |
| ScBIR1P | NP_012622 | BIR1 12-116, BIR2 145-240 |
Figure 2The role of IAPs in the regulation of cell death. Apoptosis induced by TNF or Fas ligand via death receptors (DR) involves adaptor-protein-mediated recruitment and activation of initiator caspases, such as caspase 8 (C8), and the subsequent activation of downstream caspases such as caspase 3 (C3) and 7 (not shown). In cell death induced via stress pathways such as irradiation or drugs, cytochrome c (Cyt c) and DIABLO are released from the mitochondria. Cytochrome c binds to the carboxyl terminus of the adaptor protein Apaf-1, allowing it to unfold, interact with inactive caspase 9 (Pro-C9) and promote its oligomerization and autoprocessing to give active C9; active caspase 9 then can activate downstream caspases. Pro-survival members of the Bcl-2 family inhibit cell death via stress pathways and can prevent release of cytochrome c and DIABLO from mitochondria. The downstream caspases cleave cellular substrates (such as poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and inhibitor of caspase-activated DNase (ICAD)), resulting in many morphological changes and culminating in cell death. IAPs prevent cell death by interacting with and inhibiting active caspases, whereas the IAP antagonist DIABLO can prevent these interactions.
Figure 3Mechanism of caspase inhibition by IAPs and its prevention by the IAP antagonist DIABLO/Smac. (a) The amino terminus of the p10 subunit of caspase 9, revealed following autoprocessing, interacts tightly within a groove of the BIR3 domain of XIAP. (b) The linker region upstream of the BIR2 domain of XIAP interacts tightly with the catalytic site of caspase 3 (and caspase 7; C indicates the catalytic cysteine residue), resulting in effective caspase inhibition. A less significant interaction of the amino terminus of the small subunit of caspase 3 within a groove of the BIR2 domain has been proposed. (c) The amino terminus of DIABLO (red) is similar to that of caspase 9 and competes for the exact same interaction site within the BIR3 domain. (d) A similar groove within the BIR2 domain of XIAP is believed to mediate interaction with DIABLO and provides a mechanism for DIABLO to remove caspase 3 from XIAP.