The Japan Radiation Research Society Annual Meeting Abstracts
The 53rd Annual Meeting of The Japan Radiation Research Society
Session ID : OB-1-4
Conference information

B. Radiation Response and signal transduction
Differential regulation of caspase-9 by ionizing radiation- and UV-induced apoptotic pathways in thymic cells
*Masaaki TATSUKAMayumi OKAMOTOSatomi KOGATomoharu MIKIKenta WATANABESanae KOYAMikiko FUJIITakahide OTA
Author information
Keywords: p53, Bcl-xL, Apaf-1
CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS FREE ACCESS

Details
Abstract
In mouse thymic lymphoma 3SB cells bearing wild type p53, ionizing radiation (IR) and UV light are potent triggers of caspase-3-dependent apoptosis. Although cytochrome c was released from mitochondria as expected, caspase-9 activation was not observed in UV-exposed cells. Laser scanning confocal microscopy analysis showed that caspase-9 is localized in an unusual punctuated pattern in UV-induced apoptotic cells. In agreement with differences in the status of caspase-9 activation between IR and UV, subcellular protein fractionation experiments showed that pro-apoptotic apoptosis protease-activating factor 1 (Apaf-1), normally a part of the apoptosome assembled in response to the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria, and B-cell lymphoma extra long (Bcl-xL), an inhibitor of the change in mitochondrial membrane permeability, were redistributed by the IR-exposure but not by the UV-exposure. Instead of the sequestration of the capase-9/apoptosome activation in UV-induced apoptotic cells, the extrinsic apoptotic signaling generated by caspase-8 activation and consequent activation of B-cell lymphoma extra long (Bid) to release cytochrome c from mitochondria was observed. Thus, the post-mitochondrial apoptotic pathway downstream of cytochrome c release cannot operate the apoptosome function in UV-induced apoptosis in thymic 3SB cells. The intracellular redistribution and sequestration of apoptosis-related proteins upon mitochondrion-based apoptotic signaling was identified as a novel cellular mechanism to respond to DNA damage in an agent type-specific manner. This finding suggests that the kind of the critical ultimate apoptosis-inducing DNA lesion complex form resulting from the agent-specific DNA damage responses is important to determine which of apoptosis signals would be activated. We are grateful to Shiho Sakita-Suto, Kanami Harada, Akifumi Kanda, Hidehiko Kawai, and Fumio Suzuki for their encouragement and helpful comments.
Content from these authors
© 2010 The Japan Radiation Research Society
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top