The product of the UTH1 gene, required for Bax‐induced cell death in yeast, is involved in the response to rapamycin

N Camougrand, A Grelaud‐Coq, E Marza… - Molecular …, 2003 - Wiley Online Library
N Camougrand, A Grelaud‐Coq, E Marza, M Priault, JJ Bessoule, S Manon
Molecular microbiology, 2003Wiley Online Library
A yeast mutant was isolated that was resistant to Bax‐induced cell death. It supports a
mutation leading to decreased amounts of the protein Uth1p. A strain in which the UTH1
gene is disrupted also exhibits resistance to Bax expression. The absence of Uth1p does not
change the mitochondrial localization of Bax, its insertion in the mitochondrial outer
membrane or its cytochrome c‐releasing activity. On the other hand, the absence of Uth1p
does prevent the appearance of other hallmarks related to Bax expression in yeast, such as …
Summary
A yeast mutant was isolated that was resistant to Bax‐induced cell death. It supports a mutation leading to decreased amounts of the protein Uth1p. A strain in which the UTH1 gene is disrupted also exhibits resistance to Bax expression. The absence of Uth1p does not change the mitochondrial localization of Bax, its insertion in the mitochondrial outer membrane or its cytochrome c‐releasing activity. On the other hand, the absence of Uth1p does prevent the appearance of other hallmarks related to Bax expression in yeast, such as oxidation of mitochondrial lipid, production of reactive oxygen species and maintenance of plasma membrane properties after ethanol stress. The absence of Uth1p was also found to induce resistance to rapamycin, a specific inducer of autophagy. This resistance only appears when cells are grown under respiratory conditions, but not under fermentative conditions, suggesting that Uth1p acts in an autophagic pathway involving mitochondria, in accordance with its main localization in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Taken together, these data show that Bax is able to activate a death pathway related to autophagy in yeast, which also exhibits typical hallmarks of apoptosis, revealing a possible dual function of Bax in both types of death. This hypothesis is discussed in the light of observations suggesting a co‐regulation of apoptosis and autophagy in mammalian cells.
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