Nitric oxide induces apoptosis via triggering mitochondrial permeability transition
Article 1997 en
Authors
SH
Sonsoles Hortelano
BD
Bruno Dallaporta
NZ
Naoufal Zamzami
Abstract
1 min read
Nitric oxide (NO) induces apoptosis in thymocytes, peripheral T cells, myeloid cells and neurons. Here we show that NO is highly efficient in inducing mitochondrial permeability transition, thereby causing the liberation of apoptogenic factors from mitochondria which can induce nuclear apoptosis (DNA condensation and DNA fragmentation) in isolated nuclei in vitro. In intact thymocytes, NO triggers disruption of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential, followed by hypergeneration of reactive oxygen species, exposure of phosphatidyl serine on the outer plasma membrane leaflet, and nuclear apoptosis. Inhibitors of mitochondrial permeability transition such as bongkrekic acid and a cyclophilin D‐binding cyclosporin A derivative, N ‐methyl‐Val‐4‐cyclosporin A, prevent the mitochondrial as well as all post‐mitochondrial signs of apoptosis induced by NO including nuclear DNA fragmentation and exposure of phosphatidylserine residues on the cell surface. These findings indicate that NO can cause apoptosis via triggering of permeability transition.
Philippe Marchetti, M Castedo, Santos A. Susín, Naoufal Zamzami, Tamara Hirsch, Antonio Macho, A Haeffner, François Hirsch, Maurice Geuskens, Guido Guido Kroemer
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