Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.4.2.30 (PARP)
13,611 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The new and growing family of interleukin-1beta-converting enzyme (ICE) cysteine proteases are now recognised to be major effectors of cellular death by apoptosis. Like other members of this family, the CPP32/Yama proform is activated by processing to its active heterodimeric enzyme or apopain when it likely contributes to the process of apoptosis by cleaving poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and thereby inhibiting much of its DNA repair activity. Apoptosis plays a fundamental role in the regulation of the immune system where it is involved in the selection of both T and B lymphocytes bearing antigen receptor (AgR) for non-self. Cells of the Ramos Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-genome-negative Burkitt lymphoma (BL) B cell line (Ramos-BL) can be triggered into growth arrest and apoptosis by treating with the calcium ionophore ionomycin or by crosslinking their surface AgR with antibodies directed against immunoglobulin (Ig)M (anti-IgM). Ionomycin- and AgR-triggered growth arrest and apoptosis are arrested by signals transduced through the surface CD40 of Ramos-BL B cells. Both ionomycin and anti-IgM trigger activation of CPP32 and cleavage of PARP prior to the onset of apoptosis; this process is abrogated by treatment with anti-CD40 and is independent of Bcl-2 expression. A tripeptide inhibitor of ICE family cysteine proteases, Z-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk) inhibits ionomycin- and AgR-triggered CPP32 activation, PARP cleavage and apoptosis, but not growth arrest, in Ramos-BL B cells. Thus, in this report we demonstrate that in a physiological system, activation of endogenous members of the ICE family, including CPP32, and cleavage of the death substrate PARP act as major effectors of apoptotic death.
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PMID:Ligation of CD40 rescues Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma B cells from calcium ionophore- and antigen receptor-triggered apoptosis by inhibiting activation of the cysteine protease CPP32/Yama and cleavage of its substrate PARP. 864 64

Cells of the Epstein-Barr virus genome-negative Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma (Ramos-BL) B cell line can be rescued from antigen receptor (AgR)-triggered growth inhibition and apoptosis by signals transduced through their surface CD40. This study investigates whether phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase), which has been reported to be intimately involved in the regulation of normal and neoplastic cell growth, plays a role in CD40-promoted Ramos-BL B cell survival and uses the selective and reversible PI3-kinase inhibitor, LY294002 (LY). LY-mediated inhibition of PI3-kinase activity triggers growth inhibition and leads to the processing of caspase-3, caspase-3-like activity, cleavage of the death substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), and apoptosis from the G1 phase of cell cycle. These data indicate that constitutive PI3-kinase activity is critical for Ramos-BL B cell progression through the cell cycle such that if this PI3-kinase-dependent pathway(s) is inhibited, the cells default to apoptosis. Signals transduced through CD40 abrogate LY-triggered caspase-3-like activity and PARP cleavage but fail to inhibit LY-triggered growth inhibition, processing of caspase-3, and apoptosis. Likewise, in the presence of LY, signals transduced through CD40 abrogate AgR-triggered caspase-3-like activity and PARP cleavage but fail to inhibit AgR-triggered growth inhibition, caspase-3 processing, and apoptosis. The LY-mediated induction of growth inhibition and apoptosis occurs in the presence of the CD40-induced anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-XL. Taken together these data indicate that the CD40 of Ramos BL B cells is linked to PI3-kinase-independent and -dependent routes of survival: CD40-mediated inhibition of AgR-triggered caspase-3-like activity, PARP cleavage, and CD40-triggered Bcl-XL expression are PI3-kinase-independent, whereas PI3-kinase is critical for CD40-mediated rescue of this cellular population from AgR-triggered growth inhibition, caspase-3 processing, and apoptosis.
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PMID:LY294002-mediated inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity triggers growth inhibition and apoptosis in CD40-triggered Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma B cells. 973 95

The B cell lymphoma WEHI-231 has been used as a model to study immature B cell tolerance, based on its capacity to undergo growth arrest and programmed cell death on B cell receptor (BCR) cross-linking. Using this model to identify the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes, we found that BCR cross-linking results in the selective activation of caspase 7/Mch3, but not of the other two members of the CPP32 family, caspase 2/Nedd2 and caspase 3/CPP32. This was evidenced by the induction of proteolytic activity against the substrate for the CPP32 subfamily of caspases (z-DVED-AMC) in vitro, as well as PARP proteolysis in vivo and by the processing of the 35 kDa Mch3 into a 32 kDa species, which was later further proteolyzed. The general caspase inhibitor z-VAD-fmk, but not the CPP32 family inhibitor Ac-DEVD-CHO, blocked anti- micro-induced apoptosis, indicating that a caspase not belonging to the CPP32-like family is also implicated in anti- micro-triggered apoptosis. In contrast, z-VAD-fmk was not able to counteract growth arrest induced by anti- micro treatment, suggesting that caspase activation is not necessary for induction of growth arrest. Neither of the inhibitors prevented Mch3 processing; however, z-VAD-fmk prevented proteolysis of the p32 subunit, suggesting that further processing of this subunit is associated with apoptosis. Bcl-2 overexpression prevented anti- micro induction of CPP32-like activity and apoptosis, and blocked further processing of the Mch3 p32 subunit. In contrast, CD40 stimulation completely blocked the appearance of the p32 subunit in addition to blocking CPP32-like activity and apoptosis induced by BCR cross-linking. Moreover, only CD40 stimulation was able to prevent anti- micro-induced growth arrest, which was correlated with inhibition of retinoblastoma and of cyclin A down-regulation. In splenic B cells, Mch3 is also specifically proteolyzed ex vivo after induction of apoptosis by BCR cross-linking, demonstrating the specific involvement of caspase-7/Mch3 in apoptosis induced in B cell tolerance.
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PMID:Caspase activation by BCR cross-linking in immature B cells: differential effects on growth arrest and apoptosis. 1022 36

We have previously shown that malignant B cells from non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) are resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis. To determine the mechanisms underlying this resistance, we analysed by Western blotting the expression of several apoptotic regulators, caspase 3, caspase 8, FADD and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) in fresh lymphoma cells, isolated from 16 B-NHL biopsy samples of different histological subtypes, and displaying variable levels of Fas expression. The profiles of expression of these apoptotic regulators were monitored in cell lysates at different times following Fas with or without CD40 stimulation. Expression of FADD and of the uncleaved forms of PARP, caspase 3 and caspase 8 were detected in all untreated NHL samples. Low levels of PARP cleavage were noted in three untreated samples. Fas stimulation alone induced neither significant apoptosis nor significant changes in the expression profiles of FADD, caspases 3 and 8 and PARP in the 16 samples, except for variations in FADD and caspase 8 expression levels in a minority of samples. Fas/CD40 co-stimulation induced apoptosis and cleavage of caspase 3, caspase 8 and PARP in the five NHLs tested; expression of FADD was not modified. Our results showed (1) that induction of apoptosis in B-NHLs by Fas/CD40 co-stimulation used the same caspase executioner machinery as the normal Fas pathway, and (2) that NHL cells which resisted Fas-mediated apoptosis displayed no defect in either expression or functionality of caspases 3 and 8, nor in FADD expression. The dysfunction underlying NHL resistance to apoptosis must therefore lie upstream of caspase 8, or could alternatively be influenced by anti-apoptotic regulators of the Bcl-2 family.
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PMID:FADD expression and caspase activation in B-cell lymphomas resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis. 1046 53

We demonstrate here that selective activation of endogenous members of the caspase family and cleavage of substrates responsible for the maintenance of nuclear functional and structural integrity are major effectors of antigen receptor (AgR)- and ionomycin-triggered apoptosis in Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma (Ramos-BL) B cells. Ramos-BL B cells express significant proenzyme levels of caspase-2, -3, -7 and -8, low levels of caspase-6 and are caspase-1-negative. However, while anti-IgM and ionomycin trigger for significant activation of caspase-3, -7 and -8 at 12-16 h and at 4 h post-stimulation respectively, both anti-IgM and ionomycin fail to activate caspase-2 indicating that AgR- and ionomycin-triggered Ramos-BL B cell apoptosis is mediated by the selective activation of, at least, caspase-3, -7 and -8. Anti-IgM triggers for cleavage of the resident nuclear proteins poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) at 8 h, lamins B1 and B2 from 12 to 16 h; likewise, ionomycin triggers for degradation of PARP at 2 h, lamins B1 and B2 at 4 h. Signal transduction through CD40 rescues Ramos-BL B cells from AgR- and ionomycin-triggered apoptosis at a very early stage of the apoptotic process by inhibiting both the early cleavage of PARP as well as the activation of caspase-3, -7 and -8 and cleavage of lamin B1; CD40-mediated rescue occurs upstream of CD40-induced expression of Bcl-2 and increased expression of Bcl-xL. In such cellular populations subject to regulation through apoptosis, dysregulation of the apoptotic mechanisms can have devastating consequences by contributing to the pathogenesis of malignancy as well as to lymphoproliferative and autoantibody disorders. An understanding of the role played by caspases in the execution of apoptosis may provide insight into the pathogenesis of these disease states and thereby provide targets for novel therapeutic strategy.
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PMID:Temporal ordering of caspase activation and substrate cleavage during antigen receptor-triggered apoptosis in Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma B cells. 1285 74

The regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation is essential for BCR-triggered cellular responses during the selection process in the germinal centres. We were interested in examining the temporal regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation following CD40 cross-linking of anti-IgM-triggered Ramos-BL B cells. CD40 co-stimulation of anti-IgM-treated Ramos-BL B cells rescued them from growth inhibition and apoptosis, even when anti-CD40 Abs were added up to 12 h after the cross-linking of the BCR. The initial up-regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation triggered by BCR cross-linking is followed by tyrosine dephosphorylation after 12 h of stimulation, coinciding with pro-caspase-3 processing and PARP cleavage. We find that CD40 co-stimulation rescues BCR-triggered Ramos-BL B cells only before the irreversible inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity after 12 h of BCR cross-linking and that this is coupled with up-regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation; thus demonstrating the importance of the late regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation for CD40-mediated rescue of Ramos-BL B cells from BCR-triggered G1 growth arrest and apoptosis.
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PMID:Regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation during the CD40-mediated rescue of Ramos-BL B cells from BCR-triggered apoptosis. 1621 Dec 67

Interleukin-21 (IL-21) is a member of the IL-2 cytokine family, which mediates proliferation or growth arrest and apoptosis of normal B cells, depending on their activation state. Here we demonstrate that surface IL-21 receptor (R) is expressed at variable levels by chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) B cells freshly isolated from 33 different patients. IL-21R expression was up-regulated following cell stimulation via surface CD40. Therefore, IL-21 effects were more evident in CD40-activated CLL B cells. IL-21 induced an early signaling cascade in CLL B cells, which included JAK-1 and JAK-3 autophosphorylation and tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT-1, STAT-3, and STAT-5. IL-21 signaling failed to stimulate CLL B-cell proliferation, but induced their apoptosis. In addition, IL-21 counteracted the proliferative and antiapoptotic signals delivered by IL-15 to CLL B cells. IL-21-mediated apoptosis involved activation of caspase-8 and caspase-3, cleavage of Bid to its active form t-Bid, and cleavage of PARP and of p27Kip-1. Recent data indicate that CLL B cells require interaction with the microenvironment for their survival and expansion. The present findings thus provide a set of new mechanisms involved in the balance between cell-survival and apoptotic signals in CLL B cells.
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PMID:Interleukin-21 receptor (IL-21R) is up-regulated by CD40 triggering and mediates proapoptotic signals in chronic lymphocytic leukemia B cells. 1639 Oct 14

The regulation of the tyrosine phosphorylation of key signaling molecules by tyrosine kinases and phosphatases is essential for BCR-triggered signaling cascades during B cell selection process. We used the non-selective tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor vanadate to study the importance of the late regulation of the tyrosine phosphorylation for BCR-triggered G1 growth arrest and apoptosis in Ramos-BL B cells. Vanadate induces G2M growth arrest in a dose-dependent manner and prevents BCR-triggered apoptosis. Vanadate-induced upregulation of the tyrosine phosphorylation is concomitant with increased expression of cyclin B and inhibition of caspase-3 activation and PARP cleavage. The anti-apoptotic effect of vanadate was observed even when added up to 6 hours after the treatment of Ramos-BL B cells with anti-IgM. Vanadate increases BCR-triggered tyrosine phosphorylation of the cytosolic tyrosine phosphatases, SHP-1 and SHP-2 after 24 hours. Co-stimulation with anti-CD40 prevents anti-IgM-triggered tyrosine phosphorylation of these phosphatases and up-regulates the expression of SHP-1. We conclude that the regulation of the tyrosine phosphatase activity is indispensable for BCR-triggered execution of the apoptosis in Ramos-BL B cells.
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PMID:Vanadate-induced inhibition of BCR-triggered apoptosis is coupled with tyrosine phosphorylation and induction of G2M growth arrest in Ramos-BL B cells. 1755 12

Almost 2% of the population of western industrialized countries are affected by Alzheimer's disease (AD). Nevertheless the pathogenetic process leading to this neurodegenerative disease is widely unknown. Thus, we focus on novel pathophysiological aspects of AD. We hypothesize that AD patients reveal increased levels of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) expressing proinflammatory (COX-2, TNF-alpha, CD40), proapoptotic (PARP-1), adhesion-relevant (CD38) or AD associated (C99, BACE1, Presenilin-1) proteins as well as elevated proinflammatory biochemical plasma parameters. Therefore, PBMCs of AD patients and age-matched control subjects were studied by two color fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis. Furthermore, concentration of plasma oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) and TNF-alpha were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). We found a significantly increased percentage of TNF-alpha, COX-2, PARP-1, CD38, C99 or presenilin-1 positive PBMCs in AD patients compared with healthy subjects. FACS analyses revealed that the percentage of C99 or presenilin-1 positive PBMCs, which also express TNF-alpha, COX-2, PARP-1 or CD38 is also increased in AD patients. Additionally, AD patients had significantly increased plasma oxLDL and TNF-alpha levels. Furthermore, we found positive correlations between plasma oxLDL or TNF-alpha concentrations and the percentage of TNFalpha+, COX-2+ or PARP-1+, as well as PS-1+, C99+ or BACE+ PBMCs. Our findings suggest that immunocytological investigations, based on immunophenotyping of AD relevant proteins combined with measurement of proinflammatory, proapoptotic and adhesion-relevant proteins in PBMCs may provide more insight into the pathophysiology of AD.
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PMID:Novel systemic markers for patients with Alzheimer disease? - a pilot study. 1869 Aug 33

Deregulated apoptosis and suppressed tumour reactive immunity render tumour cells to grow amok in the host body. Traditionally used botanicals may offer potential anticancer chemo-immunotherapeutic leads. We report in this study a chemically standardised herbal formulation (WSF) of Withania somnifera possessing anticancer and Th1 immune up-regulatory activities. WSF produced cytotoxicity in a panel of human cancer cell lines in vitro. The molecular mechanism of cell cytotoxicity, IC(50) 48h approximately 20mug/ml, was investigated in HL-60, where it induced apoptosis by activating both intrinsic and extrinsic signalling pathways. It induced early generation of reactive nitrogen and oxygen species (RNOS), thus producing oxidative stress mediated mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) loss leading to the release of cytochrome c, the translocation of Bax to mitochondria and apoptosis-inducing factor to the nuclei. These events paralleled the activation of caspase-9, -3 and PARP cleavage. WSF also activated caspase-8 through enhanced expression of TNF-R1 and DR-4, suggesting also the involvement of extrinsic pathway of apoptosis. WSF at 150mg/kg, i.p., inhibited >50% tumour growth in the mouse tumour models. In tumour-bearing mice, WSF inhibited the expression of pStat-3, with a selective stimulation of Th1 immunity as evidenced by enhanced secretion of IFN-gamma and IL-2. In parallel, it enhanced the proliferation of CD4(+)/CD8(+) and NK cells along with an increased expression of CD40/CD40L/CD80. In addition, WSF also enhanced T cell activation in camptothecin treated tumour-bearing mice. WSF being safe when given orally up to 1500mg/kg to rats for 6 months may be found useful in the management of malignancy by targeting at multiple pathways.
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PMID:Immune modulation and apoptosis induction: Two sides of antitumoural activity of a standardised herbal formulation of Withania somnifera. 1926 63


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