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)

Intracellularly, the anticancer drug taxol induces tubulin polymerization and mitotic arrest, followed by apoptosis. The DNA repair enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamins are known to be degraded during apoptosis. PARP is a substrate for the Yama protease, which is encoded by the CPP32 beta/ Yama gene, whereas lamins are degraded by the Yama and lamin proteases. In the present studies, we determined the effects of enforced overexpression of the antiapoptosis Bcl-xL protein on taxol-mediated microtubule and cell cycle perturbations, as well as on taxol-induced apoptosis and associated Yama protease activity in human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells. Our data demonstrate that high Bcl-xL levels do not affect the microtubular bundling or mitotic arrest due to taxol but significantly inhibit the morphological, flow cytometric, and DNA fragmentation features associated with taxol-induced apoptosis. This resulted in a significant improvement in the survival of taxol-treated cells that possess high Bcl-xL levels. In the control HL-60 cells, following taxol treatment, whereas the mRNA of Yama was not induced, taxol-induced apoptosis was associated with Yama activation and PARP as well as lamin B1 degradation. These features were blocked by coculture of these cells with the cysteine protease inhibitor YVAD-cmk as well as in cells with overexpression of Bcl-xL. These results suggest that Bcl-xL antagonizes taxol-induced apoptosis by a mechanism that interferes with the activation of a key protease involved in the execution of apoptosis.
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PMID:Bcl-xL overexpression inhibits taxol-induced Yama protease activity and apoptosis. 885 5

To investigate the involvement of different proteases in the execution step of apoptosis and to determine their intracellular location, isolated rat thymocyte nuclei were incubated either in the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ or with cytosolic extract from Jurkat T lymphocytes treated with anti-Fas (APO-1, CD-95) antibody. Inhibitors of caspases, VADcmk and DEVDcho, were not effective in hindering Ca2+-induced apoptotic changes in isolated nuclei, but did prevent similar changes in nuclei treated with the cytosolic extract from apoptotic Jurkat cells. In contrast, the inhibitor of the Ca2+-regulated, nuclear scaffold-associated serine protease, AAPFcmk, was able to inhibit lamin B1 breakdown, as well as chromatin cleavage in nuclei incubated in the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+, but only partially prevented the same changes induced with cytosolic extract. Our findings provide evidence for the involvement of at least two proteases in lamin cleavage. One belongs to the caspase family and to cleave lamins this enzyme must be translocated from the cytoplasm into the nucleus. The second protease has a nuclear location and is activated by Ca2+. Finally, neither of these two lamin-cleaving proteases is responsible for the cleavage of another nuclear target protein, poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP), during apoptosis.
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PMID:Two different proteases are involved in the proteolysis of lamin during apoptosis. 914 3

The Fas/Fas ligand (FasL) pathway is widely involved in apoptotic cell death in lymphoid and nonlymphoid cells. It has recently been postulated that many chemotherapeutic agents also induce cell death by activating the Fas/FasL pathway. In the present study we compared apoptotic pathways induced by anti-Fas or chemotherapeutic agents in the Jurkat human T-cell leukemia line. Immunoblotting showed that treatment of wild-type Jurkat cells with anti-Fas or the topoisomerase II-directed agent etoposide resulted in proteolytic cleavage of precursors for the cysteine-dependent aspartate-directed proteases caspase-3 and caspase-7 and degradation of the caspase substrates poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamin B1. Likewise, affinity labeling with N-(N(alpha)-benzyloxycarbonylglutamyl-N(epsilon)-biotinyllysyl+ ++)aspartic acid [(2,6-dimethyl-benzoyl)oxy]methyl ketone [Z-EK(bio)D-amok] labeled the same five active caspase species after each treatment, suggesting that the same downstream apoptotic pathways have been activated by anti-Fas and etoposide. Treatment with ZB4, an antibody that inhibits Fas-mediated cell death, failed to block etoposide-induced apoptosis, raising the possibility that etoposide does not initiate apoptosis through Fas/FasL interactions. To further explore the relationship between Fas- and chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, Fas-resistant Jurkat cells were treated with various chemotherapeutic agents. Multiple independently derived Fas-resistant Jurkat lines underwent apoptosis that was indistinguishable from that of the Fas-sensitive parental cells after treatment with etoposide, doxorubicin, topotecan, cisplatin, methotrexate, staurosporine, or gamma-irradiation. These results indicate that antineoplastic treatments induce apoptosis through a Fas-independent pathway even though Fas- and chemotherapy-induced pathways converge on common downstream apoptotic effector molecules.
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PMID:Comparison of apoptosis in wild-type and Fas-resistant cells: chemotherapy-induced apoptosis is not dependent on Fas/Fas ligand interactions. 924 21

Recent work has demonstrated that glucocorticoids, nucleoside analogues, and other cancer chemotherapeutics induce apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells. In this study, we investigated the involvement of protease activation in these responses using selective peptide inhibitors of the interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE)/caspase family and a Ca2+-activated protease we recently implicated in thymocyte apoptosis. Apoptosis was associated with proteolytic cleavage of poly(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and increased caspase protease activity, and cell-permeant caspase antagonists [zVAD(OMe)fmk and Boc-D(OBzl)cmk] blocked apoptosis in response to the glucocorticoid methylprednisolone or the nucleoside analogue fludarabine, indicating that caspase activation was required for these responses. However, a peptide-based inhibitor of the Ca2+-dependent lamin protease (zAPFcmk) also completely suppressed DNA fragmentation and the cleavage of lamin B1 . Strikingly, treatment of cells with zAPFcmk alone led to characteristic PARP cleavage, depletion of the precursor forms of two ICE family proteases (CPP32 and ICH-1), and phosphatidylserine exposure, suggesting that blockade of the lamin protease led to activation of the ICE family. Our results implicate the lamin protease as a target for Ca2+ during chemotherapy-induced apoptosis in CLL lymphocytes, and they identify a novel functional interaction between the protease and members of the ICE family.
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PMID:Protease activation is required for glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemic lymphocytes. 934 52

The mechanism of cell death caused by cytokine deprivation remains largely unknown. FL5.12 cells (a murine prolymphocytic cell line), following interleukin-3 (IL-3) withdrawal, undergo a decrease in intracellular glutathione (GSH) that precedes the onset of apoptosis. In the present study, the induction of apoptosis following IL-3 withdrawal or GSH depletion with DL-buthionine-[S,R,]-sulfoximine (BSO) was examined. Both conditions caused time-dependent increases in phosphatidylserine externalization, acridine orange and ethidium bromide staining, decreases in mitochondrial membrane potential, processing and activation of caspase-3 and proteolysis of the endogenous caspase substrate poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose)polymerase (PARP). Apoptosis induced by IL-3 deprivation but not BSO also caused lamin B1 cleavage, suggesting activation of caspase-6. Despite a more profound depletion of GSH after BSO than withdrawal of IL-3, the extent of apoptosis was somewhat lower. Benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe)fluoromethyl ketone (z-VAD.fmk) blocked this caspase activity and prevented cell death after BSO exposure but not after IL-3 deprivation. Following IL-3 withdrawal, the caspase inhibitors z-VAD.fmk and boc-asp(OMe)fluoromethylketone (boc-asp.fmk) prevented the cleavage and activation of caspase-3, the breakdown of lamin B1 and partially mitigated PARP degradation. However, the externalization of phosphatidylserine, the fall in mitochondrial membrane potential and subsequent apoptotic cell death still occurred. These results suggest that IL-3 withdrawal may mediate cell death by a mechanism independent of both caspase activation and the accompanying loss of GSH.
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PMID:Apoptosis in hematopoietic cells (FL5.12) caused by interleukin-3 withdrawal: relationship to caspase activity and the loss of glutathione. 1020 May 49

Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is an abundant chromatin associated protein important in DNA repair, maintenance of chromosomal stability and programmed cell death. Here we report that an increase in caspase 3-activity and cleavage of PARP serves as an early execution phase signal in human neuroblastoma. Human neuroblastoma SK-N-SH cells were exposed to a protein kinase inhibitor, staurosporine, or a topoisomerase II inhibitor, etoposide, at various concentrations and time points. Cells exposed to staurosporine (0.1 microM) for 30 min showed an increase in caspase 3-activity and by 1 h an increase in PARP 116-kDa band and an 85-kDa cleavage product, which further increased in density with time after treatment. Quantitative analysis for condensed chromatin material using bisbenzimide, and DNA fragmentation enzyme immunoassays showed a significant increase in apoptosis 5 h after staurosporine treatment. This was further confirmed with a Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I assay which primarily detects single-stranded DNA breaks. A significant decrease in mitochondrial metabolism occurred within 8-12 h after treatment. Studies using Trypan Blue exclusion, and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) release revealed a significant increase in membrane permeability 8 h after staurosporine (0.1 microM) or etoposide (10 microM) treatments. Cleavage of lamin B1, a protein important in maintaining the nuclear envelope integrity was observed 12 h after staurosporine treatment. Our results show that activation of caspase 3 followed by PARP cleavage occur at much earlier time point than any other morphological or biochemical parameters of apoptosis or cytotoxicity.
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PMID:Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase induction is an early signal of apoptosis in human neuroblastoma. 1076 13

JP-8 is a kerosene-based fuel widely used by the U.S. military. Various models of human occupational and animal exposure to JP-8 have demonstrated the potential for local and systemic toxicity but the mechanisms involved are unknown. The purpose of our investigation was to study the molecular mechanisms of JP-8 toxicity by using an in vitro model. JP-8 exposure in a rat lung alveolar type II epithelial cell line (RLE-6TN) induces biochemical and morphological markers of apoptotic cell death: caspase-3 activation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) cleavage, chromatin condensation, membrane blebbing, cytochrome c release from mitochondria, and genomic DNA cleavage into both oligonucleosomal (DNA ladder) and high-molecular-weight (HMW) fragments. The human histiocytic lymphoma cell line (U937) also responds to JP-8 with caspase-3 activation, cleavage of caspase substrates, including PARP, DNA-PK, and lamin B1, and degradation of genomic DNA with the production of HMW fragments. Caspase-3 activation and PARP cleavage also occur in the acute T-cell leukemia cell line (Jurkat) following treatment with JP-8. Furthermore, Jurkat cells stably transfected with a plasmid encoding the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-x(L) or pretreated with the pan-caspase inhibitor Boc-d-fmk, are relatively resistant to the cytotoxic effects of JP-8 compared to control cells. Finally, we demonstrate that PARP cleavage occurs in primary mouse thymocytes exposed to JP-8. In conclusion, our data support the hypothesis that apoptotic cell death is responsible at least partially for the cytotoxic effects of JP-8 and suggest that inhibition of the apoptotic cascade might reduce JP-8 toxicity.
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PMID:Mechanisms of JP-8 jet fuel toxicity. I. Induction of apoptosis in rat lung epithelial cells. 1122 85

Cepharanthine (CEP) is a known membrane stabilizer that has been widely used in Japan for the treatment of several disorders such as anticancer therapy-provoked leukopenia. We here report that apoptosis was induced by low concentrations (1-5 microM) of CEP in a human leukemia T cell line, Jurkat, and by slightly higher concentrations (5-10 microM) in a human chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cell line K562, which expresses a p210 antiapoptotic Bcr-Abl fusion protein. Induction of apoptosis was confirmed in both Jurkat and K562 cells by DNA fragmentation and typical apoptotic nuclear change, which were preceded by disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential and were induced through a Fas-independent pathway. CEP treatment induced activation of caspase-9 and -3 accompanied by cleavage of PARP, Bid, lamin B1, and DFF45/ICAD in both Jurkat and K562 cells, whereas caspase-8 activation and Akt cleavage were observed only in Jurkat cells. The CEP-induced apoptosis was completely blocked by zVAD-fmk, a broad caspase inhibitor. Interestingly, CEP treatment induced remarkable degradation of the Bcr-Abl protein in K562 cells, and this degradation was prevented partially by zVAD-fmk. When used in combination with a nontoxic concentration of herbimycin A, lower concentrations (2-5 microM) of CEP induced obvious apoptosis in K562 cells with rapid degradation or decrease in the amount of Bcr-Abl and Akt proteins. Our results suggest that CEP, which does not have bone marrow toxicity, may possess therapeutic potential against human leukemias, including CML, which is resistant to anticancer drugs and radiotherapy.
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PMID:Cepharanthine activates caspases and induces apoptosis in Jurkat and K562 human leukemia cell lines. 1152 46

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

Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma (Ramos-BL) B cell line is a neoplastic model of normal B cell selection by apoptosis at the germinal center site during maturation of the humoral immune response and can be triggered into apoptosis by cross-linking their surface antigen receptor with antibodies directed against immunoglobulin (Ig)M (anti-IgM) or by treating with the calcium ionophore ionomycin. We have recently demonstrated that anti-IgM and ionomycin trigger significant activation of caspase-3, -7 and -8 and for cleavage of the resident nuclear proteins poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and lamin B1 in Ramos-BL B cells, suggesting that these caspases may be localized to the nucleus as well as to the cytoplasm of Ramos-BL B cells. In order to examine this hypothesis further, we fractionated Ramos-BL B cells into their cytosolic and nuclear components and examined for expression of the endogenous proform and active large subunit of caspase-3; procaspase-3 and its active p17 large subunit were identified in both the cytosolic and nuclear fractions of Ramos-BL B cells. Immunofluorescence staining together with ordinary and confocal microscopy confirmed the observations that procaspase-3 immunoreactivity was clearly identified in the cytoplasm and nucleus while Fas ligand staining was localized to the cell surface and PARP immunoactivity to the nucleus, which were used as controls; procaspase-3 exhibited granular nuclear immunoreactivity whereas PARP displayed diffuse nuclear immunoreactivity; both of which was more intense in the internucleolar regions. Taken together, we now present evidence that procaspases and their active large subunits are found in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus and that procaspases localized not only in the cytoplasm but also in the nucleus are activated following application of apoptotic stimulus in Ramos-BL B cells.
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PMID:Procaspase-3 and its active large subunit localized in both cytoplasm and nucleus are activated following application of apoptotic stimulus in Ramos-Burkitt lymphoma B cells. 1288 46


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