Death-associated protein (DAP)-kinase is a calcium/calmodulin regulated serine/threonine kinase that carries ankyrin repeats, a death domain, and is localized to the cytoskeleton. Here, we report that this kinase is involved in tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and Fas-induced apoptosis. Expression of DAP-kinase antisense RNA protected cells from killing by anti-Fas/APO-1 agonistic antibodies. Deletion of the death domain abrogated the apoptotic functions of the kinase, thus, documenting for the first time the importance of this protein domain. Overexpression of a fragment encompassing the death domain of DAP-kinase acted as a specific dominant negative mutant that protected cells from TNF-α, Fas, and FADD/MORT1-induced cell death. DAP- kinase apoptotic function was blocked by bcl-2 as well as by crmA and p35 inhibitors of caspases, but not by the dominant negative mutants of FADD/MORT1 or of caspase 8. Thus, it functions downstream to the receptor complex and upstream to other caspases. The multidomain structure of this serine/threonine kinase, combined with its involvement in cell death induced by several different triggers, place DAP-kinase at one of the central molecular pathways leading to apoptosis.
CITATION STYLE
Cohen, O., Inbal, B., Kissil, J. L., Raveh, T., Berissi, H., Spivak-Kroizaman, T., … Kimchi, A. (1999). DAP-kinase participates in TNF-α- and Fas-induced apoptosis and its function requires the death domain. Journal of Cell Biology, 146(1), 141–148. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.146.1.141
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.