CGC Bibliography Paper 3077

The C. elegans protein EGL-1 is required for programmed cell death and interacts with the Bcl-2-like protein CED-9.

Conradt B, Horvitz HR

Medline:
98265964
Citation:
Cell 93: 519-529 1998
Type:
ARTICLE
Genes:
ced-3 ced-4 ced-9 ces-1 ces-2 egl-1 itDf2 lwDf2 nDf42 yDf8 yDf11 zuDf2
Abstract:
Gain-of-function mutations in the Caenorhabditis elegans gene egl-1 cause the HSN neurons to undergo programmed cell death. By contrast, a loss-of-function egl-1 mutation prevents most if not all somatic programmed cell deaths. The egl-1 gene negatively regulates the ced-9 gene, which protects against cell death and is a member of the bcl-2 family. The EGL-1 protein contains a nine amino acid region similar to the Bcl-2 homology region 3 (BH3) domain but does not contain a BH1, BH2, or BH4 domain, suggesting that EGL-1 may be a member of a family of cell death activators that includes the mammalian proteins Bik, Bid, Harakiri, and Bad. The EGL-1 and CED-9 proteins interact physically. We propose that EGL-1 activates programmed cell death by binding to and directly inhibiting the activity of CED-9, perhaps by releasing the cell death activator CED-4 from a CED-9/CED-4-containing protein complex.