The crystal structure of the mouse apoptosis-inducing factor AIF

MJ Maté, M Ortiz-Lombardía, B Boitel, A Haouz… - Nature structural …, 2002 - nature.com
MJ Maté, M Ortiz-Lombardía, B Boitel, A Haouz, D Tello, SA Susin, J Penninger, G Kroemer
Nature structural biology, 2002nature.com
Mitochondria play a key role in apoptosis due to their capacity to release potentially lethal
proteins. One of these latent death factors is cytochrome c, which can stimulate the
proteolytic activation of caspase zymogens. Another important protein is apoptosis-inducing
factor (AIF), a flavoprotein that can stimulate a caspase-independent cell-death pathway
required for early embryonic morphogenesis. Here, we report the crystal structure of mouse
AIF at 2.0 Å. Its active site structure and redox properties suggest that AIF functions as an …
Abstract
Mitochondria play a key role in apoptosis due to their capacity to release potentially lethal proteins. One of these latent death factors is cytochrome c, which can stimulate the proteolytic activation of caspase zymogens. Another important protein is apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF), a flavoprotein that can stimulate a caspase-independent cell-death pathway required for early embryonic morphogenesis. Here, we report the crystal structure of mouse AIF at 2.0 Å. Its active site structure and redox properties suggest that AIF functions as an electron transferase with a mechanism similar to that of the bacterial ferredoxin reductases, its closest evolutionary homologs. However, AIF structurally differs from these proteins in some essential features, including a long insertion in a C-terminal β-hairpin loop, which may be related to its apoptogenic functions.
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