Abstract

Homeostasis in colonic epithelial cells is regulated by the balance between proliferative activity and cell loss by apoptosis. Because epithelial cells at the apex of colonic crypts undergo apoptosis and proliferative activity is usually restricted to the base of the crypts, it has been proposed that the limited availability of growth factor-signals at the upper portions of the crypts may trigger apoptosis. In the present studies, we investigate the mechanism of apoptosis mediated by growth factor deprivation in colorectal carcinoma cells by delineating the possible involvement of Bax and its subcellular localization. We report that inhibition of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase activity and downregulation of EGFR by anti-EGFR mAb 225 induces apoptosis in human colorectal carcinoma DiFi and FET cells. Induction of apoptosis was preceded by enhanced expression of newly synthesized Bax protein, and required protein synthesis. In the mAb 225-treated cells, Bax was redistributed from the cytosol to the nucleus and subsequently, to the nuclear membranes. The observed induction of Bax expression by mAb 225 was not associated with p53 induction. However, mAb 225 treatment also triggered relocalization of p53 from the cytosol to a nuclear membrane-bound form. Induction of Bax and its redistribution to the nucleus of DiFi cells during apoptosis was also demonstrated in response to butyrate, a physiological relevant molecule in colonic epithelial cells as it is the principal short-chain fatty acid produced by bacterial fermentation of dietary fiber in colonic epithelium. Using immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, we observed that Bax is predominantly localized in the cytosol, but during apoptosis it is localized both inside and along the nuclear membrane. Taken together, these findings suggest that apoptosis induced by growth factor-deprivation or butyrate may involve the subcellular redistribution of Bax in human colorectal carcinoma cells.

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