Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.290, No.1, 359-365, 2002
Subcellular localization, oligomerization, and ATP-Binding of Caenorhabditis elegans CED-4
Caspase family cell death proteases are activated during apoptosis through the oligomerization of caspase-binding "adapter" proteins. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans one adapter protein, CED-4, exists. Here we report an analysis of CED-4 protein expressed in insect Sf9 cells by infection with recombinant baculovirus. During expression, CED-4 assumed a perinuclear spherical or reticular localization where it was partly resistant to extraction with nonionic detergents. Both purified FLAG-CED-4 and GST-FLAG-CED-4 proteins were present in solution as large complexes. FLAG-CED-4 complexes were estimated by gel filtration to have a molecular weight of approximately 500 kDa to > 1.2 MDa, while GST-FLAG-CED-4 complexes appeared somewhat smaller. Unlike its mammalian homologue Apaf-1, CED-4 exhibited a marked preference for ATP over dATP in filter binding studies and in competition experiments. ATP hydrolysis was required neither for complex stability nor for binding of CED-3. These features are likely to be relevant for CED-4's function as a caspase adapter. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science.