Abstract

Apoptosis is essential for the regulation of cellular homeostasis in the placenta and is also involved in the pathophysiology of pregnancy-related diseases such as pre-eclampsia and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Syncytin-1, a fusiogenic glycoprotein of endogenous-retroviral origin expressed in human trophoblasts, facilitates placental syncytium formation and is found reduced in pre-eclamptic placentas. We focus here on the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway and investigate whether the overexpression of syncytin-1 in HEK293-52 (human embryonic kidney cells) and CHO-52 cells influences the apoptotic response to the mitochondrial inhibitor antimycin A (AA). After the induction of apoptosis by 5 microM AA and incubation for up to 36 h in the absence of serum, the mean apoptotic rate was reduced by 15-30% in syncytin-1 transfected cells compared with mock-transfectants. After 12 h of challenge with AA we found lower cytochrome c levels in the cytoplasmic protein fraction and higher amounts in the mitochondrial fraction in syncytin-1 transfectants compared with mock-transfectants. We observed a decreased Mitotracker Red staining of mitochondria following AA challenge for 24 h in mock-treated CHO cells, in particular, compared with syncytin-1 transfectants. Moreover, we found a reduced activation of caspase 9 in syncytin-1 transfected HEK293-52 cells after 48 h of apoptotic challenge compared to mock-transfectants. However, a high expression of anti-apoptotic Bcl-x(L) was found in both cell types. Using syncytin-1 transfected HEK293-52 cells and CHO-52 cells, we provide initial evidence that syncytin-1 may exert its anti-apoptotic function at the mitochondrial level. A reduced release of cytochrome c followed by a diminished activation of caspase 9 is a possible mechanism.

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