Abstract

The role of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP(3)R) in caspase-3 activation and cell death was investigated in DT40 chicken B-lymphocytes stably expressing various IP(3)R constructs. Both full-length type-I IP(3)R and a truncated construct corresponding to the caspase-3 cleaved "channel-only" fragment were able to support staurosporine (STS)-induced caspase-3 activation and cell death even when the IP(3)R construct harbored a mutation that inactivates the pore of the Ca(2+) channel (D2550A). However, a full-length wild-type IP(3)R did not promote caspase-3 activation when the 159-amino acid cytosol-exposed C-terminal tail was deleted. STS caused an increase in cytosolic free Ca(2+) in DT40 cells expressing wild-type or pore-dead IP(3)R mutants. However, in the latter case all the Ca(2+) increase originated from Ca(2+) entry across the plasma membrane. Caspase-3 activation of pore-dead DT40 cells was also more sensitive to extracellular Ca(2+) chelation when compared with wild-type cells. STS-mediated release of cytochrome c into the cytosol and mitochondrial membrane potential depolarization could also be observed in DT40 cells lacking IP(3)Rs or containing the pore-dead mutant. We conclude that nonfunctional IP(3)Rs can sustain apoptosis in DT40 lymphocytes, because they facilitate Ca(2+) entry mechanisms across the plasma membrane. Although the intrinsic ion-channel function of IP(3)Rs is dispensable for apoptosis induced by STS, the C-terminal tail of IP(3)Rs appears to be essential, possibly reflecting key protein-protein interactions with this domain.

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