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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.4.22.56 (
caspase-3
)
35,750
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relative contributions of apoptosis and necrosis in brain injury have been a matter of much debate. Caspase-3 has been identified as a key protease in the execution of apoptosis, whereas calpains have mainly been implicated in excitotoxic neuronal injury. In a model of unilateral hypoxia-ischemia in 7-day-old rats,
caspase-3
-like activity increased 16-fold 24 h postinsult, coinciding with cleavage of the
caspase-3
proenzyme and endogenous
caspase-3
substrates. This activation was significantly decreased by pharmacological calpain inhibition, using CX295, a calpain inhibitor that did not inhibit purified
caspase-3
in vitro. Activation of
caspase-3
by m-calpain, but not
mu-calpain
, was facilitated in a dose-dependent manner in vitro by incubating cytosolic fractions, containing
caspase-3
proform, with calpains. This facilitation required the presence of some active
caspase-3
and could be abolished by including the specific calpain inhibitor calpastatin. This indicates that initial cleavage of
caspase-3
by m-calpain, producing a 29-kDa fragment, facilitates the subsequent cleavage into active forms. This is the first report to our knowledge suggesting a direct link between the early, excitotoxic, calcium-mediated activation of calpain after cerebral hypoxia-ischemia and the subsequent activation of
caspase-3
, thus representing a tentative pathway of "pathological apoptosis."
...
PMID:Synergistic activation of caspase-3 by m-calpain after neonatal hypoxia-ischemia: a mechanism of "pathological apoptosis"? 1112 42
Protein synthesis inhibition occurs in neurons immediately on reperfusion after ischemia and involves at least alterations in eukaryotic initiation factors 2 (eIF2) and 4 (eIF4). Phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of eIF2 [eIF2(alphaP)] by the endoplasmic reticulum transmembrane eIF2alpha kinase PERK occurs immediately on reperfusion and inhibits translation initiation. PERK activation, along with depletion of endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ and inhibition of the endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ -ATPase, SERCA2b, indicate that an endoplasmic reticulum unfolded protein response occurs as a consequence of brain ischemia and reperfusion. In mammals, the upstream unfolded protein response components PERK, IRE1, and ATF6 activate prosurvivial mechanisms (e.g., transcription of GRP78, PDI, SERCA2b ) and proapoptotic mechanisms (i.e., activation of Jun N-terminal kinases, caspase-12, and CHOP transcription). Sustained eIF2(alphaP) is proapoptotic by inducing the synthesis of ATF4, the CHOP transcription factor, through "bypass scanning" of 5' upstream open-reading frames in ATF4 messenger RNA; these upstream open-reading frames normally inhibit access to the ATF4 coding sequence. Brain ischemia and reperfusion also induce
mu-calpain
-mediated or
caspase-3
-mediated proteolysis of eIF4G, which shifts message selection to m 7 G-cap-independent translation initiation of messenger RNAs containing internal ribosome entry sites. This internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation initiation (i.e., for apoptosis-activating factor-1 and death-associated protein-5) can also promote apoptosis. Thus, alterations in eIF2 and eIF4 have major implications for which messenger RNAs are translated by residual protein synthesis in neurons during brain reperfusion, in turn constraining protein expression of changes in gene transcription induced by ischemia and reperfusion. Therefore, our current understanding shifts the focus from protein synthesis inhibition to the molecular pathways that underlie this inhibition, and the role that these pathways play in prosurvival and proapoptotic processes that may be differentially expressed in vulnerable and resistant regions of the reperfused brain.
...
PMID:Molecular pathways of protein synthesis inhibition during brain reperfusion: implications for neuronal survival or death. 1182 11
The number of neutrophils in the blood and tissues is controlled by constitutive apoptotic programmed cell death and clearance by phagocytes such as macrophages. Here, we found that calpains cleave the X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP) in vitro, producing fragments that are unable to inhibit
caspase-3
. These fragments were detected in normal neutrophils but were unstable and rapidly degraded. Calpain inhibition delayed tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced apoptosis of normal neutrophils, consistent with a role for calpains in regulating the onset of apoptosis. Interestingly, neutrophils from three patients with chronic neutrophilic leukemia, a rare syndrome characterized by accumulation of mature neutrophils, exhibited decreased
mu-calpain
expression, diminished calpain activity, and impaired XIAP degradation. Neutrophils from these patients displayed a delay in spontaneous, Fas-stimulated, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced apoptosis. These observations suggest that calpain-mediated XIAP degradation contributes to initiation of apoptosis in normal neutrophils and dysfunction of this regulatory pathway can lead to pathological neutrophil accumulation.
...
PMID:Calpain-mediated X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis degradation in neutrophil apoptosis and its impairment in chronic neutrophilic leukemia. 1212 83
Decreased susceptibility to apoptosis and impaired proliferative control are thought to be responsible for prolonged life span and accumulation of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cells. The activity of calpains (calcium-dependent, neutral proteases, active in the cells responding to signals inducing a rise of cytoplasmic Ca(++)) is involved in the regulation of apoptosis of some cell types by interaction with
caspase-3
. This work verifies the hypothesis of the abnormal activity of calpains and its role in reduced apoptosis of the B-CLL cells. Casein zymography, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, and Western blotting were used for identification and quantification of the activity and expression of calpains in B-CLL cells and purified normal B lymphocytes. The activity and expression of
mu-calpain
(requiring micromolar Ca(++) for activation) are significantly higher in the leukemic than in nonmalignant cells. Contrarily, the activity and expression of m-calpain (requiring millimolar Ca(++)) as well as the expression of calpastatin (an endogenous inhibitor of calpains) are unchanged or reduced in the B-CLL lymphocytes. Correspondingly, the activity of
caspase-3
is many times lower in the B-CLL cells than in normal B lymphocytes. Inhibition of overexpressed
mu-calpain
in living B-CLL cells in vitro results in doubling of the proportion of the cells undergoing spontaneous apoptosis. This observation suggests a possible role for calpains in longer survival of the B-CLL cells and may open new therapeutic possibilities.
...
PMID:Modulation of the activity of calcium-activated neutral proteases (calpains) in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cells. 1217 3
We have previously reported that overexpression of wild-type amyloid precursor protein (APP) in postmitotic neurons induces cleavage-dependent activation of
caspase-3
both in vivo and in vitro. In this study, we investigated the mechanism underlying APP-induced
caspase-3
activation using adenovirus-mediated gene transfer into postmitotic neurons derived from human embryonal carcinoma NT2 cells. Overexpression of wild-type APP significantly increased intracellular (45)Ca(2+) content prior to the activation of
caspase-3
in NT2-derived neurons. Chelation of intracellular Ca(2+) markedly suppressed APP-induced activation of
caspase-3
. Furthermore, calpain, a Ca(2+)-dependent cysteine protease, was activated in neurons overexpressing APP as assessed by increased levels of calpain-cleaved alpha-fodrin and autolytic
mu-calpain
fragments. Neither calpain nor
caspase-3
was activated in neurons expressing an APP mutant defective in the Abeta(1-20) domain. Calpain inhibitors almost completely suppressed APP-induced activation of neuronal
caspase-3
. E64d, a membrane permeable inhibitor of calpain, significantly suppressed APP-induced neuronal death. These results suggest that overexpression of wild-type APP activates calpain that mediates
caspase-3
activation in postmitotic neurons.
...
PMID:Activation of calpain in cultured neurons overexpressing Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein. 1242 45
The role of caspases and calpains in neurodegeneration remains unclear. In this study, we focused on these proteases in a rat model of Huntington's disease using the mitochondrial toxin 3-nitropropionic acid (3NP). Results showed that 3NP-induced death of striatal neurons was preceded by cytochrome c redistribution, transient caspase-9 processing, and activation of calpain, whereas levels of the active/processed form of
caspase-3
remained low and were even reduced as compared with control animals. We evidenced here that this decrease in active
caspase-3
levels could be attributed to calpain activation. Several observations supported this conclusion. 1) Pharmacological blockade of calpain in 3NP-treated rats increased the levels of endogenous processed caspase-9 and
caspase-3
. 2) Cell-free extracts prepared from the striatum of 3NP-treated rats degraded in vitro the p34 and p20 subunits of active recombinant caspase-9 and
caspase-3
, respectively. 3) This degradation of p34 and p20 could be mimicked by purified
mu-calpain
and was prevented by calpain inhibitors. 4) mu-Calpain produced a loss of the DEVDase (Asp-Glu-Val-Asp) activity of active
caspase-3
. 5) Western blot analysis and experiments with 35S-radiolabeled
caspase-3
showed that
mu-calpain
cleaved the p20 subunit of active
caspase-3
near its catalytic site. 6) mu-Calpain activity was selectively inhibited (IC50 of 100 mum) by a 12 amino acid peptide corresponding to the C terminus of p20. Our results showed that calpain can down-regulate the caspase-9/
caspase-3
cell death pathway during neurodegeneration due to chronic mitochondrial defects in vivo and that this effect may involve, at least in part, direct cleavage of the
caspase-3
p20 subunit.
...
PMID:In vivo calpain/caspase cross-talk during 3-nitropropionic acid-induced striatal degeneration: implication of a calpain-mediated cleavage of active caspase-3. 1291 35
In the absence and in the resolution of inflammatory responses, neutrophils rapidly undergo spontaneous apoptosis. Here we report about a new apoptosis pathway in these cells that requires
calpain-1
activation and is essential for the enzymatic activation of the critical effector
caspase-3
. Decreased levels of calpastatin, a highly specific intrinsic inhibitor of calpain, resulted in activation of
calpain-1
, but not calpain-2, in neutrophils undergoing apoptosis, a process that was blocked by a specific
calpain-1
inhibitor or by intracellular delivery of a calpastatin peptide. Further support for the importance of the calpastatin-calpain system was obtained by analyzing neutrophils from patients with cystic fibrosis that exhibited delayed apoptosis, associated with markedly increased calpastatin and decreased
calpain-1
protein levels compared with neutrophils from control individuals. Additional studies were designed to place
calpain-1
into the hierarchy of biochemical events leading to neutrophil apoptosis. Pharmacological calpain inhibition during spontaneous and Fas receptor-induced neutrophil apoptosis prevented cleavage of Bax into an 18-kDa fragment unable to interact with Bcl-xL. Moreover, calpain blocking prevented the mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and Smac, which was indispensable for
caspase-3
processing and enzymatic activation, both in the presence and absence of agonistic anti-Fas receptor antibodies. Taken together, calpastatin and
calpain-1
represent critical proximal elements in a cascade of pro-apoptotic events leading to Bax, mitochondria, and
caspase-3
activation, and their altered expression appears to influence the life span of neutrophils under pathologic conditions.
...
PMID:Calpain-1 regulates Bax and subsequent Smac-dependent caspase-3 activation in neutrophil apoptosis. 1461 48
Despite a preponderance of studies demonstrating gene expression and/or enzymatic activation of calpain and caspase proteases after traumatic brain injury (TBI), no studies have examined the effects of injury magnitude on expression levels of these cell death effectors after TBI. Determination of the degree to which injury severity affects specific expression profiles is critical to understanding the relevant pathways contributing to post-trauma pathology and for developing targeted therapeutics. This investigation tested the hypothesis that different injury magnitudes (1.0, 1.2, and 1.6 mm) cause alterations in the regional and temporal patterns of mRNA expression of calpain-related (
calpain-1
and -2, calpastatin) and caspase-related (caspases -3, -8, -9, BID) gene products after cortical impact in rats. Quantitative RT-PCR was used to compare effects of injury severity on mRNA levels in ipsilateral (injured) cortex and hippocampus, 6 h to 5 days post-injury. TBI caused increases in mRNA expression of all proteins examined, with the highest expression detected in the cortex. Generally, injury magnitude and levels of gene expression were positively correlated. High levels of gene induction were observed with BID,
caspase-3
, and -8, while caspase-9 mRNA had the lowest level of induction. Interestingly, although calpains are activated within minutes of TBI, calpain mRNA expression was highest 72 h to 5 days post-TBI. This study is the first analysis of the regional and temporal expression of calpains and caspases after TBI. These data provide insight into the inter-relationship of these two protease families and on the distinct but overlapping cascades of cell death after TBI.
...
PMID:Effects of injury severity on regional and temporal mRNA expression levels of calpains and caspases after traumatic brain injury in rats. 1530 96
Cochlear and vestibular sensory cells undergo apoptosis when exposed to aminoglycoside antibiotics in organ culture, but mechanisms of chronic drug-induced hair cell loss in vivo are unclear. We investigated cell death pathways in a mouse model of progressive kanamycin-induced hair cell loss. Hair cell nuclei showed both apoptotic- and necrotic-like appearances but markers for classic apoptotic pathways (cytochrome c, caspase-9,
caspase-3
, JNK, TUNEL) were absent. In contrast, drug treatment caused EndoG translocation, activation of
mu-calpain
, and both the synthesis and activation of cathepsin D. Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) was decreased, but a caspase-derived 89 kDa PARP1 fragment was not present. The mRNA level of PARP1 remained unchanged. Thus, chronic administration of aminoglycosides causes multiple forms of cell death, without a major contribution by classic apoptosis. These results provide a better understanding of the toxic effects of aminoglycosides and are relevant to design protection from aminoglycoside-induced hearing loss.
...
PMID:Caspase-independent pathways of hair cell death induced by kanamycin in vivo. 1602 Nov 80
Thromboxane A(2) (TXA(2)) is an important lipid mediator generated during oxidative stress and implicated in ischemic neural injury. This autacoid was recently shown to partake in this injury process by directly inducing endothelial cytotoxicity. We explored the mechanisms for this TXA(2)-evoked neural microvascular endothelial cell death. Stable TXA(2) mimetics 5-heptenoic acid, 7-[6-(3-hydroxy-1-octenyl)-2-oxabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-yl]-[1R-[1alpha,4alpha,5beta(Z),6alpha,(1E,3S)]]-9,11-dedioxy-9alpha,11alpha-methanolpoxy (U-46619) [as well as [1S-[1alpha,2alpha(Z),3beta(1E,3S(*)),4alpha]]-7-[3-[3-hydroxy-4-(4-iodophenoxy)-1-butenyl]-7-oxabicyclo[2.1.1]-hept-2-yl]-5-heptenoic acid; I-BOP] induced a retinal microvascular degeneration in rat pups in vivo and in porcine retinal explants ex vivo and death of porcine brain endothelial cells (in culture). TXA(2) dependence of these effects was corroborated by antagonism using the selective TXA(2) receptor blocker (-)-6,8-difluoro-9-p-methyl-sulfonyl-benzyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazol-1-yl-acetic acid (L670596). In all cases, neurovascular endothelial cell death was prevented by pan-calpain and specific m-calpain inhibitors but not by
caspase-3
or pan-caspase inhibitors. Correspondingly, TXA(2) (mimetics) augmented generation of known active m-calpain (but not
mu-calpain
) form and increased the activity of m-calpain (cleavage of fluorogenic substrate N-succinyl-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin; and of alpha-spectrin into specific fragments) but not of pan-caspase or specific
caspase-3
(respectively, using sulforhodamine-Val-Arg-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone and detecting its active 17- and 12-kDa fragments). Interestingly, these effects were phospholipase C (PLC)-dependent [associated with increase in inositol triphosphate and inhibited by PLC blocker 1-[6-[[17beta-methoxyestra-1,3,5(10)-trien-17-yl]amino]hexyl]-1H-pyrrole-2,5-dione (U73122)] and required calcium but were not associated with increased intracellular calcium. U-46619-induced calpain activation resulted in translocation of Bax to the mitochondria, loss of polarization of the latter (using potentiometric probe 5,5',6,6'-tetrachloro-1,1',3,3'-tetraethylbenzimidazolyl-carbocyanine iodide; JC-1) and in turn release of cytochrome c into the cytosol and depletion of cellular ATP; these effects were all blocked by calpain inhibitors. Overall, this work identifies (specifically) m-calpain as a dominant protease in TXA(2)-induced neurovascular endothelial cell death.
...
PMID:Dominant role for calpain in thromboxane-induced neuromicrovascular endothelial cytotoxicity. 1621 79
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