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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.22.36 (
caspase-1
)
6,285
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report here that the activation of the interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta)-converting enzyme (
ICE
) family is likely to be one of the crucial events of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) cytotoxicity. The cowpox virus CrmA protein, a member of the serpin superfamily, inhibits the enzymatic activity of
ICE
and
ICE
-mediated apoptosis. HeLa cells overexpressing crmA are resistant to apoptosis induced by Ice but not by Ich-1, another member of the Ice/ced-3 family of genes. We found that the CrmA-expressing HeLa cells are resistant to TNF-alpha/cycloheximide (CHX)-induced apoptosis. Induction of apoptosis in HeLa cells by TNF-alpha/CHX is associated with secretion of mature IL-1 beta, suggesting that an IL-1 beta-processing enzyme, most likely
ICE
itself, is activated by TNF-alpha/CHX stimulation. These results suggest that one or more members of the
ICE
family sensitive to CrmA inhibition are activated and play a critical role in apoptosis induced by TNF.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-induced apoptosis is mediated by a CrmA-sensitive cell death pathway. 766 87
The prognosis of AML patients who fail autologous BMT and lack a donor for a salvage allogeneic BMT is very poor. We administered an alternative drug treatment including autologous PBSC transplant to a child who relapsed with AML 4 years after a mafosfamide-purged and TBI-containing BMT for second remission AML. Treatment comprised induction-consolidation with 'short'
ICE
courses (idarubicin-Ara C-etoposide for 2 days), high-dose CY plus G-CSF with collection of CD34+ PBSC and myeloablative treatment with high-dose mitoxantrone/BEAM supported by autologous PBSC reinfusion. The outcome was complete response, lasting 24 months. The patient died in remission of drug-related cardiotoxicity. This report emphasizes the possibility of a secondary AML after mafosfamide-purge autologous BMT, and documents the feasibility of an autologous PBSC transplant in such a high risk setting.
...
PMID:Autologous PBSC transplant for late onset AML after mafosfamide-purged and TBI-containing autologous BMT. 767 Apr 9
Twenty-five patients with CML (chronic phase (CP): 15 patients; accelerated phase (AP): 10 patients) at a median of 40 months after diagnosis and ineligible for allogeneic BMT, received an intensive chemotherapy regimen consisting of idarubicin, intermediate-dose ara-C and etoposide (
ICE
protocol). All patients had previously received alpha-interferon and only two patients had had partial cytogenetic response. During recovery from chemotherapy-induced aplasia, blood progenitors cells (BPC) were harvested by leukapheresis. All metaphases were found to be Ph-negative in the collection of 12 of 25 (48%) patients (CP: 9 of 15 (60%), AP: 3 of 10 (30%)) and a decrease of < 50% Ph-positive metaphases was seen in an additional five (CP: 4 patients; AP: 1 patient). The percentage of complete Ph-disappearance was 66% in patients receiving this procedure within the first 2 years of diagnosis and 30% in those treated after the second year of diagnosis. So far, the Ph-negative collections have been used in 9 patients (CP: 8 patients; AP: 1 patient) as autograft after conditioning with total body irradiation/etoposide/CY. Seven of 9 patients engrafted and 5 are alive and well, Ph-negative at 2+, 3+, 6+, 10+ and 18+ months.
...
PMID:Collection of 'normal' blood repopulating cells during early hemopoietic recovery after intensive conventional chemotherapy in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 769 24
Apoptosis is critically dependent on the presence of the ced-3 gene in Caenorhabditis elegans, which encodes a protein homologous to the mammalian interleukin (IL)-1 beta-converting enzyme (
ICE
). Overexpression of
ICE
or ced-3 promotes apoptosis. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated rapid apoptosis is induced by the proteases granzyme A and B.
ICE
and granzyme B share the rare substrate site of aspartic acid, after which amino acid cleavage of precursor IL-1 beta (pIL-1 beta) occurs. Here we show that granzyme A, but not granzyme B, converts pIL-1 beta to its 17-kD mature form. Major cleavage occurs at Arg120, four amino acids downstream of the authentic processing site, Asp116. IL-1 beta generated by granzyme A is biologically active. When pIL-1 beta processing is monitored in lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophage target cells attacked by cytotoxic T lymphocytes, intracellular conversion precedes lysis. Prior granzyme inactivation blocks this processing. We conclude that the apoptosis-inducing granzyme A and
ICE
share at least one downstream target substrate, i.e., pIL-1 beta. This suggests that lymphocytes, by means of their own converting enzyme, could initiate a local inflammatory response independent of the presence of
ICE
.
...
PMID:Granzyme A is an interleukin 1 beta-converting enzyme. 772 67
As part of a Phase II clinical trial of topotecan, DNA breakage in vivo was measured by detecting covalent topoisomerase/DNA intermediates in peripheral blood. The
ICE
(in vivo complex of enzyme) bioassay was used to assess topotecan activity in the peripheral blood of patients before, during, and after infusion therapy. The results can be summarized as: (a)
ICE
bioassay is a specific, antibody-based assay for topoisomerase I-mediated DNA damage. Topoisomerase I/DNA complex formation can be monitored unambiguously in the absence of topotecan to establish a basal level of endogenous enzyme action on DNA; (b) infusion of topotecan significantly stimulated formation of covalent enzyme/DNA complexes. Complexes were detected within 5 min postinfusion and increased over the course of a 30-min treatment; (c) after termination of infusion, complex formation decreased by 3-4-fold within 30 min, showing that cleavage complexes quickly reseal after drug withdrawal; and (d) formation of complexes varied widely between patients. The
ICE
bioassay can evaluate the effects of topoisomerase I inhibitors on target tissues; thus, it may valuable in predicting response to these drugs.
...
PMID:Analysis of topoisomerase I/DNA complexes in patients administered topotecan. 774 9
The primary goal of acute myeloid leukemia chemotherapy is to obtain a complete remission. In adults with de novo disease, response rates reach between sixty and seventy per cent with classical '3 + 7' or DAT schemes. Curative postinduction treatments are now available for responsive patients, which makes it mandatory to look for more effective modalities of induction therapy. Experience gathered in recent years shows that idarubicin, cytosine arabinoside, and etoposide together might contribute to the modeling of an improved remission induction regimen:
ICE
. Because
ICE
and similar programs are being used with increasing frequency worldwide, we decided to review critically the underlying issues and the evidence supporting this change.
...
PMID:Remission induction therapy for adults with acute myelogenous leukemia: towards the ICE age? 775 97
Although the mechanism of mammalian apoptosis has not been elucidated, a protease of the CED-3/
ICE
family is anticipated to be a component of the death machinery. Several lines of evidence predict that this protease cleaves the death substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) to a specific 85 kDa form observed during apoptosis, is inhibitable by the CrmA protein, and is distinct from
ICE
. We cloned a ced-3/
ICE
-related gene, designated Yama, that encodes a protein identical to CPP32 beta. Purified Yama was a zymogen that, when activated, cleaved PARP to generate the 85 kDa apoptotic fragment. Cleavage of PARP by Yama was inhibited by CrmA but not by an inactive point mutant of CrmA. Furthermore, CrmA blocked cleavage of PARP in cells undergoing apoptosis. We propose that Yama may represent an effector component of the mammalian cell death pathway and suggest that CrmA blocks apoptosis by inhibiting Yama.
...
PMID:Yama/CPP32 beta, a mammalian homolog of CED-3, is a CrmA-inhibitable protease that cleaves the death substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. 777 19
In vitro brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis from cold-acclimated (CA) rats has been shown to exhibit the decreased responses to noradrenaline (NA) and glucagon (G), although an enhanced biochemical machinery for thermogenesis develops in the tissue. The present study was undertaken to clarify the inhibitory mechanism of in vitro thermogenic responses of BAT in CA rats. NA-treated rats were injected NA (40 micrograms/100g BW) twice a day for 2 or 4 weeks. The other rats were kept at 25 +/- 1 degree C (warm controls: WC), 5 +/- 1 degree C (CA), or 5 +/- 1 degree C/6h/day (intermittent cold exposure:
ICE
) for 5-6 weeks. The oxygen consumption, and glycerol as well as free fatty acids (FFA) release were measured on finely minced tissue blocks in Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer at 37 degrees C. In vitro BAT thermogenic responses to NA and G in NA-treated rats did not differ from those in vehicle-injected controls. NA as well as G increased-oxygen consumption was greatest in WC, followed by
ICE
and CA. NA as well as G increased glycerol and FFA releases in WC and
ICE
, but the degree of increment was greater in WC than that in
ICE
, while NA or G did not increase glycerol and FFA releases in CA. FFA/glycerol ratio in WC was decreased by NA as well as G, but it was not changed in
ICE
, and increased in CA. Mitochondrial GDP binding as an index of BAT thermogenic capacity did not differ between CA and WC under resting state (CA rats were transferred in warm condition before 18h at the beginning of the experiment), but it was significantly greater in
ICE
. GDP binding was significantly greater in CA sacrificed at 5 degrees C compared with WC and CA resting. Acute cold exposure (5 degrees C/1h) enhanced GDP binding in WC, resting CA and
ICE
resting, but the degree of increment was greater in CA and
ICE
than in WC. These findings suggest that cold exposure inhibits BAT thermogenic responses according to the duration NA action during cold exposure, by means of suppressing fatty acid utilization and/or masking uncoupling protein.
...
PMID:[Regulatory mechanism of non-shivering thermogenesis in cold acclimation--with special reference to in vitro thermogenic activity and lipolysis of brown adipose tissue]. 786 51
Autologous bone marrow transplantation for the treatment of solid tumors in adults remains an uncommon therapeutic approach. The feasibility of such high-dose therapies is clearly proved, especially with the advent of hematopoietic growth factors and the rescue by the peripheral stem cells to reduce the duration of the chemotherapy-induced myeloid aplasia. The question is to exactly define the place of high-dose therapy in the land of solid tumors. For the treatment of primary chemoresistant gonadal germ-cell tumors, the possibility to cure the patients and the interest of high-dose therapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation are clearly demonstrated. As consolidation for the treatment of poor prognosis tumors, the place of high-dose therapies remains moot. For the treatment of chemoresistant extragonadal germ-cell tumors, especially for primary mediastinal tumors, the level of resistance to cisplatin-based chemotherapy regimens is generally too high to be overcome by intensive therapies given as single course or as tandem courses. However in association with debulking surgery, this therapeutic approach has to be considered for some patients. In the treatment of poor prognosis breast cancer, high-dose therapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation or with peripheral stem cells support is able to convert some patients with partial response into complete responders. However, the consequences on overall survival and on disease-free survival are not evident. For metastatic breast cancer and for poor-prognosis tumors (inflammatory breast cancer, axillary metastatic nodes > or = 8), the interest of high-dose therapy has to be determined by randomized studies. These studies are ongoing in USA and in Europe. For the treatment of poor-prognosis ovarian cancer, the situation is more difficult to appraise. Once again, randomized studies have to be done to precisely define the place of high-dose therapy. In the land of small-cell lung carcinomas, high-dose therapy is actually forsaken by most of authors, even for limited diseases. The results of previous studies are disappointing. Moreover, occult medullary micrometastases involvement is frequent, once again even in limited diseases. However new therapeutic associations, as the
ICE
regimen (IFM, Carboplatin, VP-16) delivered as single or tandem therapy, have to be studied, especially as early consolidation therapy for the treatment of limited small-cell lung carcinomas.
...
PMID:[Therapeutic intensification and hematopoietic stem cell autotransplantation in the treatment of solid tumors in adults: principles, realization and application to the treatment of germ cell, trophoblastic, breast, ovarian and small-cell bronchial tumors. 1]. 787 Dec 69
A 39-year-old man had monocytoid lymphoma including a large retroperitoneal mass, retrocrural and porta hepatic adenopathy with localized pain, but no B symptoms. The tumor did not respond clinically or radiographically to CHOP or mini-
ICE
chemotherapy but has responded dramatically to radiotherapy. The patient's disease remains controlled 3 years after treatment. This case documents radioresponsiveness in a chemotherapy-refractory monocytoid lymphoma.
...
PMID:Response to radiation in chemotherapy-refractory monocytoid B-cell lymphoma: a case report. 797 6
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