1. Academic Validation
  2. BAD is a pro-survival factor prior to activation of its pro-apoptotic function

BAD is a pro-survival factor prior to activation of its pro-apoptotic function

  • J Biol Chem. 2004 Oct 1;279(40):42240-9. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M406775200.
So Young Seo 1 Ying-Bei Chen Iva Ivanovska Ann M Ranger Suk J Hong Valina L Dawson Stanley J Korsmeyer David S Bellows Yihru Fannjiang J Marie Hardwick
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 W. Harry Feinstone Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD21205, USA.
Abstract

The mammalian BAD protein belongs to the BH3-only subgroup of the Bcl-2 Family. In contrast to its known pro-apoptotic function, we found that endogenous and overexpressed BAD(L) can inhibit cell death in neurons and Other cell types. Several mechanisms regulate the conversion of BAD from an anti-death to a pro-death factor, including alternative splicing that produces the N-terminally truncated BAD(S). In addition, caspases convert BAD(L) into a pro-death fragment that resembles the short splice variant. The Caspase site that is selectively cleaved during cell death following growth factor (interleukin-3) withdrawal is conserved between human and murine BAD. A second cleavage site that is required for murine BAD to promote death following Sindbis virus Infection, gamma-irradiation, and staurosporine treatment is not conserved in human BAD, consistent with the inability of human BAD to promote death with these stimuli. However, loss of the BAD N terminus by any mechanism is not always sufficient to activate its pro-death activity, suggesting that the N terminus is a regulatory domain rather than an anti-death domain. These findings suggest that BAD is more than an inert death factor in healthy cells; it is also a pro-survival factor, prior to its role in promoting cell death.

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