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Role of CED-4 in the activation of CED-3

Abstract

Genetic analyses of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have identified three core components of the cell-death apparatus1. CED-3 and CED-4 promote, whereas CED-9 inhibits cell death. Recent studies indicate that CED-4 might interact independently with CED-3 and CED-9, forming the crux of a multicomponent death complex2. But except for its role as an adaptor molecule, little is known about CED-4 function. A clue came with the observation that mutation of the phosphate-binding loop (P-loop) of CED-4 disrupts its ability to induce chromatin condensation in yeast3. Further, a P-loop mutant of CED-4 (CED-4K165R) fails to process CED-3 in vivo, both in insect4 and mammalian cells (unpublished). We now confirm that CED-4 induces CED-3 activation and subsequent apoptosis, and that the process requires binding of ATP.

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Figure 1: CED-4 binds ATP analogues.
Figure 2: CED-4 facilitates CED-3 auto-activation in vitro.

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Chinnaiyan, A., Chaudhary, D., O'Rourke, K. et al. Role of CED-4 in the activation of CED-3. Nature 388, 728–729 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/41913

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