[PDF][PDF] Caenorhabditis elegans inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) homologue BIR-1 plays a conserved role in cytokinesis

AG Fraser, C James, GI Evan, MO Hengartner - Current Biology, 1999 - cell.com
Current Biology, 1999cell.com
Background: Inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) suppress apoptotic cell death in several
model systems and are highly conserved between insects and mammals. All IAPs contain at
least one copy of the∼ 70 amino-acid baculovirus IAP repeat (BIR), and this domain is
essential for the anti-apoptotic activity of the IAPs. Both the marked structural diversity of
IAPs and the identification of BIR-containing proteins (BIRPs) in yeast, however, have led to
the suggestion that BIRPs might play roles in other, as yet unidentified, cellular processes …
Abstract
Background: Inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs) suppress apoptotic cell death in several model systems and are highly conserved between insects and mammals. All IAPs contain at least one copy of the ∼70 amino-acid baculovirus IAP repeat (BIR), and this domain is essential for the anti-apoptotic activity of the IAPs. Both the marked structural diversity of IAPs and the identification of BIR-containing proteins (BIRPs) in yeast, however, have led to the suggestion that BIRPs might play roles in other, as yet unidentified, cellular processes besides apoptosis. Survivin, a human BIRP, is upregulated 40-fold at G2–M phase and binds to mitotic spindles, although its role at the spindle is still unclear.
Results: We have identified and characterised two Caenorhabditis elegans BIRPs,BIR-1 and BIR-2; these proteins are the only BIRPs in C. elegans. The bir-1 gene is highly expressed during embryogenesis with detectable expression throughout other stages of development; bir-2 expression is detectable only in adults and embryos. Overexpression of bir-1 was unable to inhibit developmentally occurring cell death in C. elegans and inhibition of bir-1 expression did not increase cell death. Instead, embryos lacking bir-1 were unable to complete cytokinesis and they became multinucleate. This cytokinesis defect could be partially suppressed by transgenic expression of survivin, the mammalian BIRP most structurally related to BIR-1, suggesting a conserved role for BIRPs in the regulation of cytokinesis.
Conclusions: BIR-1, a C. elegans BIRP, is probably not involved in the general regulation of apoptosis but is required for embryonic cytokinesis. We suggest that BIRPs may regulate cytoskeletal changes in diverse biological processes including cytokinesis and apoptosis.
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