ABSTRACT
TNF is a primitive protein that has emerged from more than 550 million years of evolution. Our bioinformatics study of TNF from nine different taxa in vertebrates revealed several conserved regions in the TNF sequence. By screening overlapping peptides derived from human TNF to determine their role in three different TNF-induced processes – apoptosis, necrosis and NF-κB stimulation – we found that TNF conserved regions are mostly related to cell death rather than NF-κB stimulation. Among the most conserved regions, peptides (P)12, P13 and P1213 (comprising P12 and P13) induced apoptosis, whereas P14, P15, P16 and P1516 (comprising P15 and P16) induced necrosis. Cell death induced by these peptides was not through binding to the TNF receptor. P16-induced necrosis was mainly through disruption of the cell membrane, whereas P1213-induced apoptosis involved activation of TRADD followed by formation of complex II. Finally, using a monoclonal antibody and a mutant TNF protein, we show that TNF-induced apoptosis is determined by a conserved linear sequence that corresponds to that within P1213. Our results reveal the determinant sequence that is key to the TNF primitive function of inducing apoptosis.
Footnotes
Competing interests
S.J., W.L., S.Y. and Z.Y. have filed patents as a result of this project.
Author contributions
S.J. and L.W.S. designed and wrote the manuscript; W.L. and Q.C. performed most of the experiments; S.Y. carried out some fluorescence microscopy experiments; X.X., Z.Y. and G.T. made peptides and performed peptide circular dichroism spectroscopy; Y.L. performed bioinformatic analyses; B.J. and C.S. made monoclonal antibodies.
Funding
This work is supported by The Mary Kinross Charitable Trust. The funder had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Supplementary information
Supplementary information available online at http://jcs.biologists.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1242/jcs.175463/-/DC1
- Received June 11, 2015.
- Accepted November 10, 2015.
- © 2016. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd