F1000Res. 2020 ;pii: F1000 Faculty Rev-935. [Epub ahead of print]9
Bax and Bak, two functionally similar, pro-apoptotic proteins of the Bcl-2 family, are known as the gateway to apoptosis because of their requisite roles as effectors of mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP), a major step during mitochondria-dependent apoptosis. The mechanism of how cells turn Bax/Bak from inert molecules into fully active and lethal effectors had long been the focal point of a major debate centered around two competing, but not mutually exclusive, models: direct activation and indirect activation. After intensive research efforts for over two decades, it is now widely accepted that to initiate apoptosis, some of the BH3-only proteins, a subclass of the Bcl-2 family, directly engage Bax/Bak to trigger their conformational transformation and activation. However, a series of recent discoveries, using previously unavailable CRISPR-engineered cell systems, challenge the basic premise that undergirds the consensus and provide evidence for a novel and surprisingly simple model of Bax/Bak activation: the membrane (lipids)-mediated spontaneous model. This review will discuss the evidence, rationale, significance, and implications of this new model.
Keywords: Activator; Apoptosis; BH3 mimetics; BH3-only proteins; Bad; Bak; Bax; Bcl-2 family; Bcl-xL; Bid; Bim; Direct activation; Indirect activation; Mcl-1; Membrane-mediated Spontaneous activation; Mitochondrial outer membrane; Sensitizer; auto-activation; de novo activation; retro-translocation