Tocopherol-associated protein-1 accelerates apoptosis induced by α-tocopheryl succinate in mesothelioma cells
Author(s)
Neuzil, J
Dong, LF
Wang, XF
Zingg, JM
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2006
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
a-Tocopheryl succinate (a-TOS), a redox-silent analogue of vitamin E, induces apoptosis in multiple cell lines in a selective manner, by activating the intrinsic pathway. Since it is a highly hydrophobic compound, it may require a carrier protein for its trafficking to intracellular targets like mitochondria. We studied the role of the ubiquitous tocopherol-associated protein-1 (TAP1 or sec14-like 2) in apoptosis induction by a-TOS in malignant mesothelioma (MM) cells. Over-expression of TAP1 in MM cells sensitised them to apoptosis by low doses of a-TOS which were sub-apoptotic for the parental cells. Apoptosis induced in ...
View more >a-Tocopheryl succinate (a-TOS), a redox-silent analogue of vitamin E, induces apoptosis in multiple cell lines in a selective manner, by activating the intrinsic pathway. Since it is a highly hydrophobic compound, it may require a carrier protein for its trafficking to intracellular targets like mitochondria. We studied the role of the ubiquitous tocopherol-associated protein-1 (TAP1 or sec14-like 2) in apoptosis induction by a-TOS in malignant mesothelioma (MM) cells. Over-expression of TAP1 in MM cells sensitised them to apoptosis by low doses of a-TOS which were sub-apoptotic for the parental cells. Apoptosis induced in TAP1-over-expressing cells was mitochondria- and caspase-dependent, as suggested by dissipation of mitochondrial trans-membrane potential and inhibition by zVAD-fmk, respectively. Binding assays showed affinity of a-TOS for TAP1. Finally, TAP1 over-expressing cells accumulated a-TOS at higher levels compared to their normal counterparts. We suggest that TAP1 may act as an intracellular shuttle for a-TOS, promoting apoptosis initiated by this vitamin E analogue, as shown here for MM cells.
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View more >a-Tocopheryl succinate (a-TOS), a redox-silent analogue of vitamin E, induces apoptosis in multiple cell lines in a selective manner, by activating the intrinsic pathway. Since it is a highly hydrophobic compound, it may require a carrier protein for its trafficking to intracellular targets like mitochondria. We studied the role of the ubiquitous tocopherol-associated protein-1 (TAP1 or sec14-like 2) in apoptosis induction by a-TOS in malignant mesothelioma (MM) cells. Over-expression of TAP1 in MM cells sensitised them to apoptosis by low doses of a-TOS which were sub-apoptotic for the parental cells. Apoptosis induced in TAP1-over-expressing cells was mitochondria- and caspase-dependent, as suggested by dissipation of mitochondrial trans-membrane potential and inhibition by zVAD-fmk, respectively. Binding assays showed affinity of a-TOS for TAP1. Finally, TAP1 over-expressing cells accumulated a-TOS at higher levels compared to their normal counterparts. We suggest that TAP1 may act as an intracellular shuttle for a-TOS, promoting apoptosis initiated by this vitamin E analogue, as shown here for MM cells.
View less >
Journal Title
Biochemical and biophysical research communications
Volume
343
Publisher URI
Copyright Statement
© 2006 Elsevier. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
Subject
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics