Apoptotic cleavage of rabaptin-5-like proteins and a model for rabaptin-5 inactivation in apoptosis

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Abstract

Intracellular membrane transport from the plasma membrane is one of the processes affected in apoptotic cells. Apoptotic inhibition of endosomal transport occurs due to cleavage of Rabaptin-5, an effector of small GTPase Rab5, which results in inhibition of early endosome fusion. Recently several novel Rabaptin-5-like proteins were identified. We investigated whether Rabaptin-5-like proteins, Rabaptin-5γ and Rabaptin-5δ, are also cleaved in apoptosis and found that both proteins are cleaved in apoptotic cell extracts by caspase-3-related proteases. This suggests that functional inactivation of these proteins is necessary for apoptotic cell death. We also mapped a novel, N-terminal, putative Rab5 binding site in Rabaptin-5-like proteins, which becomes physically separated from the previously known C-terminal Rab5 binding site after apoptotic cleavage of these proteins. Presence of the second Rab5 binding site provides a new insight into Rabaptin-5 function in early endosome fusion and a mechanistic model for functional inactivation of Rabaptin-5 in apoptosis. ©2006 Landes Bioscience.

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Korobko, E. V., Palgova, I. V., Kiselev, S. L., & Korobko, I. V. (2006). Apoptotic cleavage of rabaptin-5-like proteins and a model for rabaptin-5 inactivation in apoptosis. Cell Cycle, 5(16), 1854–1858. https://doi.org/10.4161/cc.5.16.3092

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