Publication | Open Access
A Novel Arabidopsis Gene Causes Bax-like Lethality in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
49
Citations
42
References
2005
Year
Plant Molecular BiologyMitochondrial FunctionSaccharomyces CerevisiaeNatural SciencesGeneticsApoptosisCell DeathArabidopsis Cdna LibraryYeastMolecular GeneticsCellular BiochemistryGene ExpressionMedicineCell BiologyCell SignalingCdf1 ProteinMitochondrial Membrane Potential
Overexpression of the mammalian proapoptotic protein Bax induces cell death in plant and yeast cells. The Bax inihibitor-1 (BI-1) gene rescues yeast and plant from Bax-mediated lethality. Using the Arabidopsis BI-1 (AtBI-1) gene controlled by the GAL1 promoter as a cell death suppressor in yeast, Cdf1 (cell growth defect factor-1) was isolated from Arabidopsis cDNA library. Overexpression of Cdf1 caused cell death in yeast, whereas such an effect was suppressed by co-expression of AtBI-1. The Cdf1 protein fused with a green fluorescent protein was localized in the mitochondria and resulted in the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential in yeast. The Bax-resistant mutant BRM1 demonstrated tolerance against Cdf1-mediated lethality, whereas the Deltaatp4 strain was sensitive to Cdf1. Our results suggest that Cdf1 and Bax cause mitochondria-mediated yeast lethality through partially overlapped pathways.
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