Investigating the oligomerization of bak and bax during apoptosis by cysteine linkage
Author(s)
Dewson, G;
Details
Publication Year 2015-05-01,Volume 2015,Issue #5,Page 481-484
Journal Title
Cold Spring Harb Protoc
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Following conformation change, Bak and Bax self-associate to form the putative apoptotic pore in the mitochondrial outer membrane. The nature of this pore and whether it is purely proteinaceous or lipidic are still unresolved. Induction of disulfide linkage with oxidants such as copper (II)(1,10-phenanthroline)3 (CuPhe) and chemical cross-linking with cell-permeable homobifunctional maleimide reagents are convenient ways to investigate Bak and Bax oligomerization in cells or isolated mitochondria. A limitation of these methods is they are based on the linkage of cysteines, and their success is reliant on the positions of the endogenous cysteines in Bak and Bax. Consequently, the protocols are more efficient and informative for human Bak than that for its murine counterpart. An additional benefit when investigating human Bak is that cysteine-based linkage assays provide information on the conformation change that precedes Bak oligomerization: Endogenous cysteines in the inactive form are in close proximity, and intramolecular linkage after treatment causes inactive Bak to migrate faster during SDS-PAGE. This intramolecular linkage is lost on activation, as the cysteines are distanced by conformation change. During apoptosis, Bak oligomerization induces the proximity of cysteines that favor intermolecular linkage. Trapped Bak oligomers can be detected with nonreducing (following oxidation with CuPhe) or reducing (following chemical cross-linking with homobifunctional maleimide reagents) SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting, as described here.
Publisher
CSHLP
Research Division(s)
Cell Signalling And Cell Death
PubMed ID
25934939
NHMRC Grants
NHMRC/637335
ARC Grants
ARC/FT100100791,
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2015-05-22 11:19:35
Last Modified: 2016-01-21 08:48:51
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