BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma Are Key Regulators of Induced Apoptosis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Bcl-2 Proteins and the Regulation of Mitochondrial Outer Membrane Permeability
3. Regulation of Apoptosis
3.1. Regulators of Cell Death: Caspases
3.2. Regulators of Cell Death: Bcl-2 Family Proteins
3.3. Elucidation of the Caspases Reaction Mechanism
- Nucleophilic activation: the alkaline property of one of the nitrogen atoms, in the imidazolic part of Histidine (His), deprotonates the hydrogen in the thiol (-SH) group of the Cys residue, yielding a thiolate.
- Thiolate nucleophilic attack on carbonyl: the carbonyl group of the aspartic peptide bond undergoes a nucleophilic attack by the yielded thiolate in the latter step. This contributes to the formation of a first tetrahedral intermediate (I1; Figure 5).
- α-amino protonation: the amine group of I1 constitutes a good leaving group. This will enhance the possibility of the protonation of the α-amino moiety by the previous protonated nitrogen of the His residue.
- Formation of the covalent adduct: the acyl-enzyme complex and the cleavage of the peptide bond.
- Once, again the alkaline property of one of the nitrogen atoms in the imidazolic part of His deprotonates a water molecule.
- This deprotonation contributes to the formation of a hydroxide. The strong alkaline and nucleophilic property of the hydroxide contributes to the attack of the electrophilic site of the carbonyl function. This yields a second tetrahedral intermediate (I2; Figure 5).
- α-thio protonation: Similarly, to the third step of phase 1, the sulfur in I2 constitutes a good leaving group. This enhances the possibility of protonation of the α-thio moiety by the previously protonated nitrogen of the His residue.
- Formation of the carboxylic acid by regeneration of His and Cys counterparts.
- The already formed hydrogen bond between His and the first water molecule will favor the deprotonation of the latter. The yielded hydroxide attacks the acyl-enzyme complex on the carbonyl moiety.
- The yielded alkoxide in I3 will attack the proton already captured by the His part in (a). This will form a germinal diol (I4; Figure 6).
- The carboxylate function of the side-chain aspartate will attack one of the hydrogens of the diol. The thiol, acting as a good leaving group, will enhance the possibility of the formation of a carbonyl bond; thereby a carboxylic acid and a thiolate (I5; Figure 6). The computational investigation shows that for the attack of the water molecule, a free energy barrier of about 19 ± 4 kcal/mol must be overcome, these trends are following the experimental results of Sulpizi et al. [88].
4. BH3-Only Protein Noxa
4.1. Discovery
4.2. General Features and Transcript Variants
4.3. Regulation of Noxa Expression and Post-Translational Modification
4.4. Subcellular Localization and Association with Bcl-2-like Proteins
5. BH3-Only Protein Puma
5.1. Regulation of the BH3-Only Protein Puma
5.2. p53-Dependent Apoptosis
5.3. p53-Independent Apoptosis
6. Ion Channels in Regulated Cell Death
7. Heat Shock Response to Puma and Noxa Proteins Expression In Vitro
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Roufayel, R.; Younes, K.; Al-Sabi, A.; Murshid, N. BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma Are Key Regulators of Induced Apoptosis. Life 2022, 12, 256. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12020256
Roufayel R, Younes K, Al-Sabi A, Murshid N. BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma Are Key Regulators of Induced Apoptosis. Life. 2022; 12(2):256. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12020256
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoufayel, Rabih, Khaled Younes, Ahmed Al-Sabi, and Nimer Murshid. 2022. "BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma Are Key Regulators of Induced Apoptosis" Life 12, no. 2: 256. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12020256
APA StyleRoufayel, R., Younes, K., Al-Sabi, A., & Murshid, N. (2022). BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma Are Key Regulators of Induced Apoptosis. Life, 12(2), 256. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12020256