SARM1 is a neuronal Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ) hydrolase that drives axonal degeneration and neuronal death by depleting NAD + , yet how NAD + loss triggers axon loss and cell death has remained unclear. Here, we define a nonapoptotic death program downstream of endogenous SARM1 activation and NAD + loss using a genetically tractable nonneuronal eHAP cell model. Upon NAD + depletion, BAX is activated but caspase activation is suppressed due to APAF1 degradation via the E3 ligase HERC4, effectively uncoupling mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization from apoptosome formation. Mechanistically, NAD + depletion inhibits mTOR/AKT signaling, destabilizing MCL1 and relieving BAX from repression. We further identified Neurofibromatosis type II, NF2, as a regulator that promotes SARM1 transcription through the Hippo–YAP/TAZ pathway. The SARM1-dependent BAX activation and the role of NF2 in axon degradation were validated in neuronal models of axon degeneration. Together, these findings reveal how SARM1-driven metabolic collapse rewires cell death execution, positioning BAX, MCL1, APAF1, NF2, and HERC4 as core effectors in a nonapoptotic degenerative pathway linking metabolic stress to neurodegeneration
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Pan et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69401d732d562116f28f9517 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2522444122
Wentao Pan
Lanzhou Jiaotong University
Dejia Guo
National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing
Daiyuan Liu
Kunming University of Science and Technology
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College
National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing
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