Alteration of Apoptotic Protease-Activating Factor-1 (APAF-1)-Dependent Apoptotic Pathway During Development of Rat Brain and Liver

Brain and liver extracts of rats at different stages after birth were examined for cyto-chrome c/dATP-dependent caspase (DEVDase)-activation (mitochondria pathway)in vitro. The caspase-activating activity in the brain extracts rapidly decreased after birth, reaching approximately 50 and 5%, at 1 and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of biochemistry (Tokyo) 2002-01, Vol.131 (1), p.131-135
Hauptverfasser: Ota, Katsuya, Yakovlev, Alexander G., Itaya, Asako, Kameoka, Masanori, Tanaka, Yasuharu, Yoshihara, Koichiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Brain and liver extracts of rats at different stages after birth were examined for cyto-chrome c/dATP-dependent caspase (DEVDase)-activation (mitochondria pathway)in vitro. The caspase-activating activity in the brain extracts rapidly decreased after birth, reaching approximately 50 and 5%, at 1 and 2 weeks, respectively, of that in a 3-days-newborn sample, and essentially no caspase-activation was detected in the adult rat brain extracts. Such a dramatic change was not detected in the liver samples, suggesting that the observed abrogation of the cytochrome c-dependent mitochondria pathway after birth is a brain-specific event. In order to determine the factor(s) lacking in adult brain, we separately measured Apaf-1, procaspase 9, and pro-DEVDase activities using a supplementation assay. In adult brain, Apaf-1 activity was scarcely detected, while the tissue retained low but significant amounts of procaspase 9 (16% of that in the fetal tissue) and a pro-DEVDase (3.4%). In contrast, adult liver extracts retained relatively high levels of all of these factors. Immunoblot analyses clearly indicated that the expression of Apaf-1 and procaspase 3 is markedly suppressed within 4 weeks after birth in brain tissue while they are even expressed in adult liver. Considering these results together, we propose that, in the brain, the cytochrome c-dependent mitochondria pathway, which is essential for the programmed cell death during normal morphogenesis, is abrogated within 2—4 weeks after birth, whereas the pathway is still active in other adult tissues such as liver.
ISSN:0021-924X
DOI:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a003067