How cells die in the absence of oxygen (anoxia) is not understood. Here we report that cells deficient in Bax and Bak or caspase-9 do not undergo anoxia-induced cell death. However, the caspase-9 null cells do not survive reoxygenation due to the generation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species. The individual loss of Bim, Bid, Puma, Noxa, Bad, caspase-2, or hypoxia-inducible factor 1beta, which are potential upstream regulators of Bax or Bak, did not prevent anoxia-induced cell death. Anoxia triggered the loss of the Mcl-1 protein upstream of Bax/Bak activation. Cells containing a mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b 4-base-pair deletion ([rho(-)] cells) and cells depleted of their entire mitochondrial DNA ([rho(0)] cells) are oxidative phosphorylation incompetent and displayed loss of the Mcl-1 protein under anoxia. [rho(0)] cells, in contrast to [rho(-)] cells, did not die under anoxia. However, [rho(0)] cells did undergo cell death in the presence of the Bad BH3 peptide, an inhibitor of Bcl-X(L)/Bcl-2 proteins. These results indicate that [rho(0)] cells survive under anoxia despite the loss of Mcl-1 protein due to residual prosurvival activity of the Bcl-X(L)/Bcl-2 proteins. Collectively, these results demonstrate that anoxia-induced cell death requires the loss of Mcl-1 protein and inhibition of the electron transport chain to negate Bcl-X(L)/Bcl-2 proteins.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1800715PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/MCB.01535-06DOI Listing

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