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A novel role for synaptic acetylcholinesterase as an apoptotic deoxyribonuclease.

Cell discovery (2015-01-01)
Aiying Du, Jing Xie, Kaijie Guo, Lei Yang, Yihan Wan, Qi OuYang, Xuejin Zhang, Xin Niu, Lu Lu, Jun Wu, Xuejun Zhang
RESUMEN

In addition to terminating neurotransmission by hydrolyzing acetylcholine, synaptic acetylcholinesterase (AChES) has been found to have a pro-apoptotic role. However, the underlying mechanism has rarely been investigated. Here, we report a nuclear translocation-dependent role for AChES as an apoptotic deoxyribonuclease (DNase). AChES polypeptide binds to and cleaves naked DNA at physiological pH in a Ca(2+)-Mg(2+)-dependent manner. It also cleaves chromosomal DNA both in pre-fixed and in apoptotic cells. In the presence of a pan-caspase inhibitor, the cleavage still occurred after nuclear translocation of AChES, implying that AChES-DNase acts in a CAD- and EndoG-independent manner. AChE gene knockout impairs apoptotic DNA cleavage; this impairment is rescued by overexpression of the wild-type but not (aa 32-138)-deleted AChES. Furthermore, in comparison with the nuclear-localized wild-type AChES, (aa 32-138)-deleted AChES loses the capacity to initiate apoptosis. These observations confirm that AChES mediates apoptosis via its DNase activity.

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Anticuerpo anti-DFF40, Chemicon®, from rabbit