1. MCL-1 is a stress sensor that regulates autophagy in a developmentally regulated manner.
- Author
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Germain, Marc, Nguyen, Angela P, Le Grand, J Nicole, Arbour, Nicole, Vanderluit, Jacqueline L, Park, David S, Opferman, Joseph T, and Slack, Ruth S
- Subjects
DETECTORS ,APOPTOSIS ,CYTOLOGY ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress ,NEURONS ,TRANSGENIC mice ,CELL determination - Abstract
Apoptosis has an important role during development to regulate cell number. In differentiated cells, however, activation of autophagy has a critical role by enabling cells to remain functional following stress. In this study, we show that the antiapoptotic BCL-2 homologue MCL-1 has a key role in controlling both processes in a developmentally regulated manner. Specifically, MCL-1 degradation is an early event not only following induction of apoptosis, but also under nutrient deprivation conditions where MCL-1 levels regulate activation of autophagy. Furthermore, deletion of MCL-1 in cortical neurons of transgenic mice activates a robust autophagic response. This autophagic response can, however, be converted to apoptosis by either reducing the levels of the autophagy regulator Beclin-1, or by a concomitant activation of BAX. Our results define a pathway whereby MCL-1 has a key role in determining cell fate, by coordinately regulating apoptosis and autophagy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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