Expression and function of the leucine zipper protein par-4 in apoptosis

  • Stephen F. Sells
  • , Seong Su Han
  • , Sumathi Muthukkumar
  • , Neeraj Maddiwar
  • , Ricky Johnstone
  • , Erwin Boghaert
  • , David Gillis
  • , Guohui Liu
  • , Prakash Nair
  • , Stephen Monnig
  • , Patrick Collini
  • , Mark P. Mattson
  • , Vikas P. Sukhatme
  • , Stephen G. Zimmer
  • , David P. Wood
  • , J. William McRoberts
  • , Yang Shi
  • , Vivek M. Rangnekar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

192 Scopus citations

Abstract

The prostate apoptosis response-4 (par-4) gene was identified by differential screening for genes that are upregulated when prostate cancer cells are induced to undergo apoptosis. The par-4 gene is induced by apoptotic signals but not by growth-arresting, necrotic, or growth- stimulatory signals. The deduced amino acid sequence of par-4 predicts a protein with a leucine zipper domain at its carboxy terminus. We have recently shown that the Par-4 protein binds, via its leucine zipper domain, to the zinc finger domain of Wilms' tumor protein WT1 (R. W. Johnstone et al., Mol. Cell. Biol. 16:6945-6956, 1996). In experiments aimed at determining the functional role of par-4 in apoptosis, an antisense par-4 oligomer abrogated par-4 expression and activator-driven apoptosis in rat prostate cancer cell line AT-3, suggesting that par-4 is required for apoptosis in these cells. Consistent with a functional role for par-4 in apoptosis, ectopic overexpression of par-4 in prostate cancer cell line PC-3 and melanoma cell line A375-C6 conferred supersensitivity to apoptotic stimuli. Transfection studies with deletion mutants of Par-4 revealed that full-length Par-4, but not mutants that lacked the leucine zipper domain of Par-4, conferred enhanced sensitivity to apoptotic stimuli. Most importantly, ectopic coexpression of the leucine zipper domain of Par-4 inhibited the ability of Par-4 to enhance apoptosis. Finally, ectopic expression of WT1 attenuated apoptosis, and coexpression of Par-4 but not a leucine zipperless mutant of Par-4 rescued the cells from the antiapoptotic effect of WT1. These findings suggest that the leucine zipper domain is required for the Par-4 protein to function in apoptosis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)3823-3832
Number of pages10
JournalMolecular and cellular biology
Volume17
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1997

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Molecular Biology
  • Cell Biology

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