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APAF-1 Protein

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protein637 wordssynced 2026-04-02

APAF-1 Protein

Overview

APAF-1 (Apoptotic Protease Activating Factor-1) is a key regulatory protein that functions as the central platform for initiating intrinsic apoptotic cascades in mammalian cells, particularly neurons. Encoded by the APAF1 gene located on chromosome 12q23.31, this ~140 kDa protein serves as a molecular hub connecting mitochondrial damage signals to the caspase cascade that executes programmed cell death. APAF-1 is highly abundant in neuronal tissues, reflecting the nervous system's dependence on precisely controlled apoptosis for developmental sculpting and maintenance of neural homeostasis. Its discovery emerged from studies of cytochrome c-induced cell death pathways in the 1990s, establishing it as a fundamental component of the apoptosome—the molecular machine that commits cells to irreversible death.

Function/Biology

APAF-1 functions as an adaptor protein with a distinctive modular architecture comprising three functional domains: a caspase recruitment domain (CARD) at the N-terminus, a centrally located nucleotide-binding domain (NB domain), and a C-terminal domain containing multiple WD40 repeats that form a β-propeller structure. In its inactive state, APAF-1 remains autoinhibited through intramolecular interactions that occlude its CARD domain.

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