Differentiation-induced HL-60 cell apoptosis: a mechanism independent of mitochondrial disruption?

Journal: Apoptosis : An International Journal On Programmed Cell Death
Published:
Abstract

HL-60 cell differentiation into neutrophil like cells is associated with their induction of apoptosis. We investigated the cellular events that occur pre and post mitochondrial permeability transition to determine the role of the mitochondria in the induction of differentiation induced apoptosis. Pro-apoptotic Bax was translocated to and cleaved at the mitochondrial membrane in addition to t-Bid activation. These processes contributed to mitochondrial membrane disruption and the release of cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO. The release of cytochrome c was caspase independent, as the caspase inhibitor Z-VAD.fmk, which inhibited apoptosis, did not block the release of cytochrome c. In contrast, the release of Smac/DIABLO was partially inhibited by caspase inhibition indicating differential release pathways for these mitochondrial pro-apoptotic factors. In addition to caspase inhibition we assessed the effects of the Bcl-2 anti-apoptotic family on differentiation induced apoptosis. BH4-Bcl-xl-TAT recombinant protein did not delay apoptosis, but did block the release of cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO. Bcl-2 over-expression also inhibited differentiation induced apoptosis but was associated with the inhibition of the differentiation process. Differentiation mediated mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO, may not trigger the induction of apoptosis, as BH4-Bclxl-TAT blocks the release of pro-apoptotic factors from the mitochondria, but does not prevent apoptosis.

Authors
B Doyle, A O'neill, J Fitzpatrick, R W Watson