Autophagy occurs upstream or parallel to the apoptosome during histolytic cell death
Author(s) -
Fatih Akdemir,
Robert Farkaš,
Po Chen,
Gábor Juhász,
Lucia Medved'ová,
Miklós Sass,
Lai Wang,
Xiaodong Wang,
Suganthi Chittaranjan,
Sharon M. Gorski,
Antony Rodríguez,
John Abrams
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.754
H-Index - 325
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.02332
Subject(s) - biology , apoptosome , autophagy , programmed cell death , microbiology and biotechnology , effector , apoptosis , caspase , regulator , genetics , gene
Histolysis refers to a widespread disintegration of tissues that is morphologically distinct from apoptosis and often associated with the stimulation of autophagy. Here, we establish that a component of the apoptosome, and pivotal regulator of apoptosis, is also required for histolytic cell death. Using in vivo and ex vivo assays, we demonstrate a global apoptogenic requirement for dark, the fly ortholog of Apaf1, and show that a required focus of dark(-) organismal lethality maps to the central nervous system. We further demonstrate that the Dark protein itself is a caspase substrate and find that alterations of this cleavage site produced the first hypermorphic point mutation within the Apaf1/Ced-4 gene family. In a model of ;autophagic cell death', dark was essential for histolysis but dispensable for characteristic features of the autophagic program, indicating that the induction of autophagy occurs upstream or parallel to histolytic cell death. These results demonstrate that stimulation of autophagy per se is not a ;killing event' and, at the same time, establish that common effector pathways, regulated by the apoptosome, can underlie morphologically distinct forms of programmed cell death.
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