Mitochondrial fission proteins regulate programmed cell death in yeast

Y Fannjiang, WC Cheng, SJ Lee, B Qi… - Genes & …, 2004 - genesdev.cshlp.org
Y Fannjiang, WC Cheng, SJ Lee, B Qi, J Pevsner, JM McCaffery, RB Hill, G Basaņez…
Genes & development, 2004genesdev.cshlp.org
The possibility that single-cell organisms undergo programmed cell death has been
questioned in part because they lack several key components of the mammalian cell death
machinery. However, yeast encode a homolog of human Drp1, a mitochondrial fission
protein that was shown previously to promote mammalian cell death and the excessive
mitochondrial fragmentation characteristic of apoptotic mammalian cells. In support of a
primordial origin of programmed cell death involving mitochondria, we found that the …
The possibility that single-cell organisms undergo programmed cell death has been questioned in part because they lack several key components of the mammalian cell death machinery. However, yeast encode a homolog of human Drp1, a mitochondrial fission protein that was shown previously to promote mammalian cell death and the excessive mitochondrial fragmentation characteristic of apoptotic mammalian cells. In support of a primordial origin of programmed cell death involving mitochondria, we found that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae homolog of human Drp1, Dnm1, promotes mitochondrial fragmentation/degradation and cell death following treatment with several death stimuli. Two Dnm1-interacting factors also regulate yeast cell death. The WD40 repeat protein Mdv1/Net2 promotes cell death, consistent with its role in mitochondrial fission. In contrast to its fission function in healthy cells, Fis1 unexpectedly inhibits Dnm1-mediated mitochondrial fission and cysteine protease-dependent cell death in yeast. Furthermore, the ability of yeast Fis1 to inhibit mitochondrial fission and cell death can be functionally replaced by human Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. Together, these findings indicate that yeast and mammalian cells have a conserved programmed death pathway regulated by a common molecular component, Drp1/Dnm1, that is inhibited by a Bcl-2-like function.
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