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Title: Nix and Nip3 form a subfamily of pro-apoptotic mitochondrial proteins. Author: Chen G, Cizeau J, Vande Velde C, Park JH, Bozek G, Bolton J, Shi L, Dubik D, Greenberg A. Journal: J Biol Chem; 1999 Jan 01; 274(1):7-10. PubMed ID: 9867803. Abstract: We have identified Nix, a homolog of the E1B 19K/Bcl-2 binding and pro-apoptotic protein Nip3. Human and murine Nix have a 56 and 53% amino acid identity to human and murine Nip3, respectively. The carboxyl terminus of Nix, including a transmembrane domain, is highly homologous to Nip3 but it bears a longer and distinct asparagine/proline-rich N terminus. Human Nip3 maps to chromosome 14q11.2-q12, whereas Nix/BNip3L was found on 8q21. Nix encodes a 23. 8-kDa protein but it is expressed as a 48-kDa protein, suggesting that it homodimerizes similarly to Nip3. Following transfection, Nix protein undergoes progressive proteolysis to an 11-kDa C-terminal fragment, which is blocked by the proteasome inhibitor lactacystin. Nix colocalizes with the mitochondrial matrix protein HSP60, and removal of the putative transmembrane domain (TM) results in general cytoplasmic and nuclear expression. When transiently expressed, Nix and Nip3 but not TM deletion mutants rapidly activate apoptosis. Nix can overcome the suppressers Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL, although high levels of Bcl-XL expression will inhibit apoptosis. We propose that Nix and Nip3 form a new subfamily of pro-apoptotic mitochondrial proteins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]