Litcius/Paper detail

Intrinsic apoptosis is evolutionarily divergent among metazoans

Gabriel Krasovec, Helen R Horkan, Éric Quéinnec, Jean‐Philippe Chambon

2023Evolution Letters20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Apoptosis is regulated cell death that depends on caspases. A specific initiator caspase is involved upstream of each apoptotic signaling pathway. Characterized in nematode, fly, and mammals, intrinsic apoptosis is considered to be ancestral, conserved among animals, and depends on shared initiators: caspase-9, Apaf-1 and Bcl-2. However, the biochemical role of mitochondria, the pivotal function of cytochrome c and the modality of caspase activation remain highly heterogeneous and hide profound molecular divergence among apoptotic pathways in animals. Uncovering the phylogenetic history of apoptotic actors, especially caspases, is crucial to shed light on the evolutionary history of intrinsic apoptosis. Here, we demonstrate with phylogenetic analyses that caspase-9, the fundamental key of intrinsic apoptosis, is deuterostome-specific, while caspase-2 is ancestral to bilaterians. Our analysis of Bcl-2 and Apaf-1 confirms heterogeneity in functional organization of apoptotic pathways in animals. Our results support emergence of distinct intrinsic apoptotic pathways during metazoan evolution.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCaspaseIntrinsic apoptosisApoptosisCell biologyCytochrome cCaspase 2Caspase-9MitochondrionNLRP1Programmed cell deathEvolutionary biologyGeneticsCell death mechanisms and regulationAutophagy in Disease and Therapy