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Letter
Nature 452, 98-102 (6 March 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature06604; Received 24 October 2007; Accepted 21 December 2007; Published online 20 February 2008
There is an Erratum (17 April 2008) associated with this document.
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Hax1-mediated processing of HtrA2 by Parl allows survival of lymphocytes and neurons
Jyh-Rong Chao1, Evan Parganas1, Kelli Boyd2, Cheol Yi Hong1, Joseph T. Opferman1 & James N. Ihle1
- Department of Biochemistry,
- Animal Resources Center, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38105, USA
Correspondence to: James N. Ihle1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to J.N.I. (Email: james.ihle@stjude.org).
Abstract
Cytokines affect a variety of cellular functions, including regulation of cell numbers by suppression of programmed cell death1. Suppression of apoptosis requires receptor signalling through the activation of Janus kinases and the subsequent regulation of members of the B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2) family. Here we demonstrate that a Bcl-2-family-related protein, Hax1, is required to suppress apoptosis in lymphocytes and neurons. Suppression requires the interaction of Hax1 with the mitochondrial proteases Parl (presenilin-associated, rhomboid-like) and HtrA2 (high-temperature-regulated A2, also known as Omi). These interactions allow Hax1 to present HtrA2 to Parl, and thereby facilitates the processing of HtrA2 to the active protease localized in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. In mouse lymphocytes, the presence of processed HtrA2 prevents the accumulation of mitochondrial-outer-membrane-associated activated Bax, an event that initiates apoptosis. Together, the results identify a previously unknown sequence of interactions involving a Bcl-2-family-related protein and mitochondrial proteases in the ability to resist the induction of apoptosis when cytokines are limiting.
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