Solé Serra, Carme
Dolcet Roca, Xavier
Segura Ginard, Miguel Francisco
Gutierrez, Humberto
Diaz Meco, Maria Teresa
Gozzelino, Raffaella
Sanchis, Daniel
Bayascas Ramírez, José Ramón
Gallego, Carme
Moscat, Jorge
Davies, Alun M.
Comella i Carnicé, Joan Xavier
2013-01-07T12:22:01Z
2013-01-07T12:22:01Z
2004
Fas apoptosis inhibitory molecule (FAIM) is a protein identified as an antagonist of Fas-induced cell death. We show that FAIM overexpression fails to rescue neurons from trophic factor deprivation, but exerts a marked neurite growth–promoting action in different neuronal systems. Whereas FAIM overexpression greatly enhanced neurite outgrowth from PC12 cells and sympathetic neurons grown with nerve growth factor (NGF), reduction of endogenous FAIM levels by RNAi decreased neurite outgrowth in these cells. FAIM overexpression promoted NF-κB activation, and blocking this activation by using a super-repressor IκBα or by carrying out experiments using cortical neurons from mice that lack the p65 NF-κB subunit prevented FAIM-induced neurite outgrowth. The effect of FAIM on neurite outgrowth was also blocked by inhibition of the Ras–ERK pathway. Finally, we show that FAIM interacts with both Trk and p75 neurotrophin receptor NGF receptors in a ligand-dependent manner. These results reveal a new function of FAIM in promoting neurite outgrowth by a mechanism involving activation of the Ras–ERK pathway and NF-κB.
Anglès
FAIM; Neurobiologia; Factors de creixement; Receptors neurals; Receptors cel·lulars; Proteïnes; Apoptosi; Mort cel·lular
Rockefeller University Press
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200403093
Journal of Cell Biology, 2004, vol. 167, núm. 3, p. 479–492
(c) Rockefeller University Press, 2004
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