| Literature DB >> 28009301 |
Jessie Pécot1, Laurent Maillet1, Janic Le Pen1, Céline Vuillier1, Sophie de Carné Trécesson1, Aurélie Fétiveau1, Kristopher A Sarosiek2, Florian J Bock3, Frédérique Braun1, Anthony Letai2, Stephen W G Tait3, Fabien Gautier4, Philippe P Juin5.
Abstract
Anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family members bind to BH3-only proteins and multidomain BAX/BAK to preserve mitochondrial integrity and maintain survival. Whereas inhibition of these interactions is the biological basis of BH3-mimetic anti-cancer therapy, the actual response of membrane-bound protein complexes to these compounds is currently ill-defined. Here, we find that treatment with BH3 mimetics targeting BCL-xL spares subsets of cells with the highest levels of this protein. In intact cells, sequestration of some pro-apoptotic activators (including PUMA and BIM) by full-length BCL-xL is much more resistant to derepression than previously described in cell-free systems. Alterations in the BCL-xL C-terminal anchor that impacts subcellular membrane-targeting and localization dynamics restore sensitivity. Thus, the membrane localization of BCL-xL enforces its control over cell survival and, importantly, limits the pro-apoptotic effects of BH3 mimetics by selectively influencing BCL-xL binding to key pro-apoptotic effectors.Entities:
Keywords: BCL-xL; BH3 mimetic resistance; membrane localization
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28009301 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.11.064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423