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Investigation of the subcellular distribution of the bcl-2 oncoprotein: residence in the nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, and outer mitochondrial membranes.

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34

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1993

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to determine the intracellular locations of the 26‑kDa Bcl‑2 protein. A multidisciplinary approach, including subcellular fractionation, gradient sedimentation, sucrose‑gradient separation, and immuno‑microscopy with multiple antibodies, was used to map these locations. Bcl‑2 was localized to the nuclear envelope, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and outer mitochondrial membrane, but not the cytosol, with a patchy distribution and comigration with mitochondrial markers, indicating a nonuniform presence in these organelles.

Abstract

A multidisciplinary approach was taken to investigate the intracellular locations of the 26-kDa integral membrane protein encoded by the bcl-2 gene. Subcellular fractionation analysis of a t(14;18)-containing lymphoma cell line revealed the presence of Bcl-2 protein in nuclear, heavy-membrane, and light-membrane fractions but not in cytosol. Sedimentation of heavy-membrane fractions in Nycodenz and Percoll continuous gradients demonstrated comigration of p26-Bcl-2 with mitochondrial but not other organelle-associated proteins. Fractionation of light-membrane fractions using discontinuous sucrose-gradients revealed association of Bcl-2 protein primarily with lighter-density microsomes (smooth endoplasmic reticulum) as opposed to heavy-density microsomes (rough endoplasmic reticulum). Immune microscopy studies using laser-scanning microscopy, pre- and postembedding electron microscopic methods, and six different anti-Bcl-2 antibodies demonstrated Bcl-2 immunoreactivity in the nuclear envelope and outer mitochondrial membrane in a patchy distribution. Furthermore, anti-Bcl-2 antibody immunoreactivity generally appeared to directly overlie the nuclear envelope in high magnification electron microscopic studies, reminiscent of nuclear pore complexes. Addition of in vitro translated p26-Bcl-2 to isolated translocation-competent mitochondria revealed transmembrane domain-dependent association of Bcl-2 protein with mitochondria but provided no evidence for import into a protease-resistant compartment, consistent with immunomicroscopic localization to the outer mitochondrial membrane. Taken together, the findings demonstrate that p26-Bcl-2 resides primarily in the nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, and outer mitochondrial membrane in a nonuniform distribution suggestive of participation in protein complexes perhaps involved in some aspect of transport.

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