Cleavage of Calnexin Caused by Apoptotic Stimuli: Implication for the Regulation of Apoptosis
Author(s) -
T. Takizawa
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.28
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1756-2651
pISSN - 0021-924X
DOI - 10.1093/jb/mvh133
Subject(s) - calnexin , endoplasmic reticulum , microbiology and biotechnology , cleavage (geology) , apoptosis , chaperone (clinical) , caspase , unfolded protein response , caspase 3 , cytoplasm , biology , calreticulin , cleavage stimulation factor , chemistry , cleavage factor , programmed cell death , biochemistry , messenger rna , gene , medicine , paleontology , pathology , fracture (geology)
Calnexin is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident molecular chaperone that plays an essential role in the correct folding of membrane proteins. We found that calnexin is subjected to partial cleavage in apoptotic mouse cells. Both ER stress-inducing and ER stress-non-inducing apoptotic stimuli caused the cleavage of calnexin, indicating that this event does not always occur downstream of ER stress. The inhibition of caspases that target the amino acid sequence DXXD abrogated calnexin cleavage in apoptotic stimulus-treated cells. In addition, disruption of one of two DXXD sequences located in the cytoplasmic domain caused calnexin to escape cleavage during apoptosis. Furthermore, calnexin was cleaved in vitro by recombinant caspase-3 or caspase-7. Finally, the overexpression of a presumed cleavage product of calnexin partly inhibited apoptosis. These results collectively suggest that caspase-3 or caspase-7 cleaves calnexin, whose cleaved product leads to the attenuation of apoptosis.
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