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  • A Death Effector Domain Cha...
    Dickens, Laura S.; Boyd, Robert S.; Jukes-Jones, Rebekah; Hughes, Michelle A.; Robinson, Gemma L.; Fairall, Louise; Schwabe, John W.R.; Cain, Kelvin; MacFarlane, Marion

    Molecular cell, 07/2012, Letnik: 47, Številka: 2
    Journal Article

    Formation of the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) is a critical step in death receptor-mediated apoptosis, yet the mechanisms underlying assembly of this key multiprotein complex remain unclear. Using quantitative mass spectrometry, we have delineated the stoichiometry of the native TRAIL DISC. While current models suggest that core DISC components are present at a ratio of 1:1, our data indicate that FADD is substoichiometric relative to TRAIL-Rs or DED-only proteins; strikingly, there is up to 9-fold more caspase-8 than FADD in the DISC. Using structural modeling, we propose an alternative DISC model in which procaspase-8 molecules interact sequentially, via their DED domains, to form a caspase-activating chain. Mutating key interacting residues in procaspase-8 DED2 abrogates DED chain formation in cells and disrupts TRAIL/CD95 DISC-mediated procaspase-8 activation in a functional DISC reconstitution model. This provides direct experimental evidence for a DISC model in which DED chain assembly drives caspase-8 dimerization/activation, thereby triggering cell death. Display omitted ► The TRAIL DISC is a soluble >700 kDa complex of TRAIL-Rs, FADD, and DED-only proteins ► LC-MS/MS defines FADD as substoichiometric relative to TRAIL-Rs/DED-only proteins ► Structural modeling reveals that FADD recruits multiple DED-only proteins to the DISC ► We uncover a crucial role for caspase-8 DED chain assembly in triggering cell death