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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 C. elegans gene product ced-9 inhibits programmed cell death by negatively regulating the death-mediating protease ced-3. The mammalian homolog of ced-9 is the oncoprotein Bcl-2. Overexpression of Bcl-2 spares mammalian and nematodal cells from dying and prevents ectopic cell death in ced-9 loss-of-function mutants. Although Bcl-2 has been shown to act as an antioxidant under certain conditions, additional functions have emerged from studies under low
oxygen
pressure. Here we show that Bcl-2 overexpression impairs activation of the interleukin-1beta converting enzyme-related death protease
CPP32
/Yama/
apopain
, the mammalian homolog of ced-3. When U937 monocytes undergo programmed cell death in response to tumor necrosis factor alpha, the inactive
CPP32
precursor is cleaved into its active forms. As a consequence poly(ADP ribose) polymerase, a major substrate of
CPP32
, is faithfully cleaved into a 85 kD fragment. Bcl-2 overexpressing cells are protected from tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced death and display neither
CPP32
maturation nor PARP cleavage. The inhibitory effect of Bcl-2 on
CPP32
activation is indirect since no physical interaction between the two proteins could be detected. These results indicate that Bcl-2 neutralizes an unknown cellular activator of
CPP32
to save cells from programmed cell death.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 overexpression blocks activation of the death protease CPP32/Yama/apopain. 861 57
Since mammalian cardiac myocytes essentially rely on aerobic energy metabolism, it has been assumed that cardiocytes die in a catastrophic breakdown of cellular homeostasis (i.e. necrosis), if
oxygen
supply remains below a critical limit. Recent observations, however, indicate that a process of gene-directed cellular suicide (i.e. apoptosis) is activated in terminally differentiated cardiocytes of the adult mammalian heart by ischemia and reperfusion, and by cardiac overload as well. Apoptosis or programmed cell death is an actively regulated process of cellular self destruction, which requires energy and de novo gene expression, and which is directed by an inborn genetic program. The final result of this program is the fragmentation of nuclear DNA into typical 'nucleosomal ladders', while the functional integrity of the cell membrane and of other cellular organelles is still maintained. The critical step in this regulated apoptotic DNA fragmentation is the proteolytic inactivation of poly-[ADP-ribose]-polymerase (PARP) by a group of cysteine proteases with some structural homologies to interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE-related proteases [IRPs] such as
apopain
, yama and others). PARP catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of nuclear proteins at the sites of spontaneous DNA strand breaks and thereby facilitates the repair of this DNA damage. IRP-mediated destruction of PARP, the 'supervisor of the genome', can be induced by activation of membrane receptors (e.g. FAS or APOI) and other signals, and is inhibited by activation of 'anti-death genes' (e.g. bcl-2). Overload-triggered myocyte apoptosis appears to contribute to the transition to cardiac failure, which can be prevented by therapeutic hemodynamic unloading. In myocardial ischemia, the activation of the apoptotic program in cardiocytes does not exclude their final destiny to catastrophic necrosis with release of cytosolic enzymes, but might be considered as an adaptive process in hypoperfused ventricular zones, sacrificing some jeopardized myocytes to regulated apoptosis, which may be less arrhythmogenic than necrosis with the primary disturbance of membrane function.
...
PMID:Apoptosis in the heart: when and why? 897 66
Cell death due to reoxygenation after hypoxia was characterized in primary cultured hepatocytes. Fluorescence and electron microscopic analyses of reoxygenated hepatocytes revealed morphological characteristics of apoptosis, including chromatin condensation, nuclear fragmentation, and formation of apoptotic bodies. Few necrotic hepatocytes, defined by loss of plasma membrane integrity, mitochondrial swelling, and formation of large vacuoles, were observed. Activation of interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE)-like and
CPP32
/Yama-like proteases, which are known to drive apoptosis, was observed during reoxygenation, and addition of their respective inhibitors inhibited the induction of apoptosis, indicating the involvement of ICE family proteases in apoptosis by reoxygenation. Production of
oxygen
radicals was enhanced by reoxygenation of hypoxic cells, and reoxygenation-induced apoptosis was inhibited by
oxygen
radical scavengers, suggesting a role for reactive
oxygen
species as a triggering factor in cell death. Electrophoretic analysis revealed the presence of 50-kb DNA fragments but not oligonucleosomal DNA fragments in reoxygenation-induced apoptotic hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Involvement of ICE family proteases in apoptosis induced by reoxygenation of hypoxic hepatocytes. 899 38
High-dose Ara-C (HIDAC) induces the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
(CPP32beta/Yama/
apopain
), resulting in the morphological and biochemical features of apoptosis. High levels of the antiapoptotic Bcl-x(L) or Bcl-2, relative to the proapoptotic Bax, have been shown to inhibit HIDAC-induced cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
and apoptosis of the human acute myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells. In a previous report, we demonstrated this inhibition, using the control HL-60 (HL-60/neo) cells and their counterparts, HL-60/Bcl-x(L), which have enforced overexpression of Bcl-x(L) and a significantly lower ratio of free to bound Bax. Results of the present studies demonstrate that, in the initiation phase of apoptosis of HL-60/neo cells due to HIDAC (10 or 100 microM for 4 h), cytochrome c is released from the mitochondria to the cytosol, followed by the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsi m) and an increase in the reactive
oxygen
species; these events precede and trigger the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
. These HIDAC-induced early mitochondrial and cytosolic perturbations, which represent the initiation phase of HIDAC-induced apoptosis, were inhibited in HL-60/Bcl-x(L) cells. HIDAC treatment for 4 h also modestly increased the intracellular levels of free Bax relative to Bax bound to Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L) in HL-60/neo but not in HL-60/Bcl-x(L) cells. In HL-60/neo cells, HIDAC-induced progressive accumulation of cytochrome c in the cytosol, the decrease in deltapsi m, and the increase in reactive
oxygen
species were not inhibited by coculture with the tetrapeptide inhibitors of caspases that have been previously shown to inhibit Ara-C-induced cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
and apoptosis. These findings indicate that Bcl-x(L) inhibits HIDAC-induced preapoptotic mitochondrial perturbations, which prevent the accumulation of cytochrome c in the cytosol, thereby preserving
caspase-3
in the inactive zymogen state and checking the molecular cascade of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Overexpression of Bcl-X(L) inhibits Ara-C-induced mitochondrial loss of cytochrome c and other perturbations that activate the molecular cascade of apoptosis. 924 35
Neuronally differentiated PC12 cells undergo synchronous apoptosis when deprived of nerve growth factor (NGF). Here we show that NGF withdrawal induces actinomycin D- and cycloheximide-sensitive caspase (ICE-like) activity. The peptide inhibitor of caspase activity, N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde, was more potent than acetyl-Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-chloromethyl ketone in preventing NGF withdrawal-induced apoptosis, suggesting an important role for
caspase-3
(
CPP32
)-like proteases. We observed a peak of reactive
oxygen
species (ROS) 6 h after NGF withdrawal. ROS appear to be required for apoptosis, because cell death is prevented by the free radical spin trap, N-tert-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone, and the antioxidant, N-acetylcysteine. ROS production was blocked by actinomycin D, cycloheximide, and caspase protease inhibitors, suggesting that ROS generation is downstream of new mRNA and protein synthesis and activation of caspases. Forced expression of either BCL-2 or the BCL-2-binding protein BAG-1 blocked NGF withdrawal-induced apoptosis, activation of caspases, and ROS generation, showing that they function upstream of caspases. Coexpression of BCL-2 and BAG-1 was more protective than expression of either protein alone.
...
PMID:Cooperative interception of neuronal apoptosis by BCL-2 and BAG-1 expression: prevention of caspase activation and reduced production of reactive oxygen species. 934 53
Betulinic acid (BA), a melanoma-specific cytotoxic agent, induced apoptosis in neuroectodermal tumors, such as neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, and Ewing's sarcoma, representing the most common solid tumors of childhood. BA triggered an apoptosis pathway different from the one previously identified for standard chemotherapeutic drugs. BA-induced apoptosis was independent of CD95-ligand/receptor interaction and accumulation of wild-type p53 protein, but it critically depended on activation of caspases (interleukin 1beta-converting enzyme/Ced-3-like proteases). FLICE/MACH (caspase-8), considered to be an upstream protease in the caspase cascade, and the downstream caspase
CPP32
/YAMA/Apopain (caspase-3) were activated, resulting in cleavage of the prototype substrate of caspases PARP. The broad-spectrum peptide inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone, which blocked cleavage of FLICE and PARP, also completely abrogated BA-triggered apoptosis. Cleavage of caspases was preceded by disturbance of mitochondrial membrane potential and by generation of reactive
oxygen
species. Overexpression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL conferred resistance to BA at the level of mitochondrial dysfunction, protease activation, and nuclear fragmentation. This suggested that mitochondrial alterations were involved in BA-induced activation of caspases. Furthermore, Bax and Bcl-xs, two death-promoting proteins of the Bcl-2 family, were up-regulated following BA treatment. Most importantly, neuroblastoma cells resistant to CD95- and doxorubicin-mediated apoptosis were sensitive to treatment with BA, suggesting that BA may bypass some forms of drug resistance. Because BA exhibited significant antitumor activity on patients' derived neuroblastoma cells ex vivo, BA may be a promising new agent for the treatment of neuroectodermal tumors in vivo.
...
PMID:Betulinic acid triggers CD95 (APO-1/Fas)- and p53-independent apoptosis via activation of caspases in neuroectodermal tumors. 986 49
Fas ligand is a potent inducer of apoptosis in human glioma cells by the Fas/Fas ligand pathway. With comparable efficiency, metalloprotease inhibitors including puromycin and bestatin induce apoptosis in glioma cells. To evaluate the involvement of potential components involved in Fas ligand- and metalloprotease inhibitor-induced apoptosis, we investigated the effect of anti human Fas antibody, soluble Fas ligand and puromycin on cultures of human malignant glioma cell lines (LN-18, LN-229, T98G). Stimulation with Fas ligand lead to apoptotic cell death within 16 h. Costimulation with the translational inhibitor cycloheximide and the transcription blocker actinomycin D did not reduce Fas ligand toxicity. In contrast, apoptosis induced by puromycin was blocked by cycloheximide and decreased by subtoxic doses of actinomycin D in all three gliomas. Whereas inhibition of caspase activity with the general inhibitor zVAD-fmk resulted in a complete block of Fas ligand-induced cell death, puromycin-mediated apoptosis was found to be unaffected by zVAD-fmk as well as by more specific inhibitors for caspase-1 (Interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme) and
caspase-3
(
CPP32
/Yama). Other prominent components involved in many apoptotic pathways as bcl-2 and reactive
oxygen
intermediates were also examined. Bcl-2 which protects glioma cells from Fas ligand-induced cell death, was shown to have only a small protective effect on puromycin-induced apoptosis. The tested radical scavengers did not reduce Fas- or puromycin-mediated killing of human glioma cells.
...
PMID:Differential activity of bcl-2 and ICE enzyme family protease inhibitors on Fas and puromycin-induced apoptosis of glioma cells. 940 14
Valinomycin is a potassium ionophore, and is well known to cause the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential. It has been reported that loss of mitochondrial membrane potential is observed in the early stages of apoptosis induced by various agents. Thus, the effects of valinomycin on tumor cells were examined. Valinomycin induced uncoupling of respiration and depolarization of isolated mitochondria. Depolarization of intact mitochondria in AH-130 rat ascites hepatoma cells was also induced by valinomycin. Valinomycin induced apoptosis revealing the typical apoptotic characteristics such as fragmentation and ladder formation of DNA, shrinkage of cells, and formation of pycnotic nucleus. There was a correlation between the depolarization of mitochondria and DNA fragmentation. After depolarization of mitochondria, the activity of
caspase-3
-like protease but not caspase-1-like protease increased markedly. In contrast, this apoptosis did not involve the release of reactive
oxygen
species from mitochondria, increase in intracellular calcium concentration, or protein synthesis. In addition, anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family (Bcl-xL and Bcl-2) were not correlated with apoptosis. These results indicate that valinomycin might induce apoptosis through degradation of the mitochondrial membrane potential. Taken together, these observations suggest that there may be a mechanism that transmits the signal from mitochondrial depolarization to subsequent apoptosis execution steps.
...
PMID:Valinomycin induces apoptosis of ascites hepatoma cells (AH-130) in relation to mitochondrial membrane potential. 943 61
Bcr-Abl expression in leukemic cells is known to exert a potent effect against apoptosis due to antileukemic drugs, but its mechanism has not been elucidated. Recent reports have indicated that a variety of apoptotic stimuli cause the preapoptotic mitochondrial release of cytochrome c (cyt c) into cytosol, which mediates the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
involved in the execution of apoptosis. Whether Bcr-Abl exerts its antiapoptotic effect upstream to the cleavage and activation of
caspase-3
or acts downstream by blocking the ensuing degradation of substrates resulting in apoptosis, has been the focus of the present studies. In these, we used (1) the human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) HL-60 cells that are stably transfected with the bcr-abl gene (HL-60/Bcr-Abl) and express p185 Bcr-Abl; and (2) the chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)-blast crisis K562 cells, which have endogenous expression of p210 Bcr-Abl. Exposure of the control AML HL-60 cells to high-dose Ara-C (HIDAC), etoposide, or sphingoid bases (including C2 ceramide, sphingosine, or sphinganine) caused the accumulation of cyt c in the cytosol, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and increase in the reactive
oxygen
species (ROS). These preapoptotic events were associated with the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
, resulting in the degradation of poly (adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and DNA fragmentation factor (DFF), internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, and morphologic features of apoptosis. In contrast, in HL-60/Bcr-Abl and K562 cells, these apoptotic stimuli failed to cause the cytosolic accumulation of cyt c and other associated mitochondrial perturbations, as well as the failure to induce the activation of
caspase-3
and apoptosis. While the control HL-60 cells showed high levels of Bcl-2 and barely detectable Bcl-xL, HL-60/Bcr-Abl cells expressed high levels of Bcl-xL and undetectable levels of Bcl-2, a pattern of expression similar to the one in K562 cells. Bax and
caspase-3
expressions were not significantly different between HL-60/Bcr-Abl or K562 versus HL-60 cells. These findings indicate that Bcr-Abl expression blocks apoptosis due to diverse apoptotic stimuli upstream by preventing the cytosolic accumulation of cyt c and other preapoptotic mitochondrial perturbations, thereby inhibiting the activation of
caspase-3
and execution of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Bcr-Abl exerts its antiapoptotic effect against diverse apoptotic stimuli through blockage of mitochondrial release of cytochrome C and activation of caspase-3. 947 36
Dysregulated apoptosis may underlie the etiology of T cell depletion by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We show that HIV-induced apoptosis is preceded by an exponential increase in reactive
oxygen
intermediates (ROIs) produced in mitochondria. This leads to
caspase-3
activation, phosphatidylserine (PS) externalization, and GSH depletion. Since mitochondrial ROI levels are regulated by the supply of NADPH from the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), the effect of transaldolase (TAL), a key enzyme of PPP, was investigated. Jurkat and H9 human CD4+ T cells were transfected with TAL expression vectors oriented in the sense or antisense direction. TAL overexpression down-regulated glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities and GSH levels. Alternatively, decreased TAL expression up-regulated glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities and GSH levels. HIV-induced 1) mitochondrial ROI production, 2)
caspase-3
activation, 3) proteolysis of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and 4) PS externalization were accelerated in cells overexpressing TAL. In contrast, suppression of TAL abrogated these four activities. Thus, susceptibility to HIV-induced apoptosis can be regulated by TAL through controlling the balance between mitochondrial ROI production and the metabolic supply of reducing equivalents by the PPP. The dominant effect of TAL expression on oxidative stress, caspase activation, PS externalization, and cell death suggests that this balance plays a pivotal role in HIV-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:Molecular ordering in HIV-induced apoptosis. Oxidative stress, activation of caspases, and cell survival are regulated by transaldolase. 956 23
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