Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.56 (caspase-3)
35,750 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Expansion of CAG repeats within the coding region of target genes is the cause of several autosomal dominant neurodegenerative diseases including Huntington's disease (HD). A hallmark of HD is the proteolytic production of N-terminal fragments of huntingtin containing polyglutamine repeats that form ubiquitinated aggregates in the nucleus and cytoplasm of the affected neurons. In this study, we used an ecdysone-inducible stable mouse neuro2a cell line that expresses truncated N-terminal huntingtin (tNhtt) with different polyglutamine length, along with mice transgenic for HD exon 1, to demonstrate that the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is involved in the pathogenesis of HD. Proteasomal 20S core catalytic component was redistributed to the polyglutamine aggregates in both the cellular and transgenic mouse models. Proteasome inhibitor dramatically increased the rate of aggregate formation caused by tNhtt protein with 60 glutamine (60Q) repeats, but had very little influence on aggregate formation by tNhtt protein with 150Q repeats. Both normal and polyglutamine-expanded tNhtt proteins were degraded by proteasome, but the rate of degradation was inversely proportional to the repeat length. The shift of the proteasomal components from the total cellular environment to the aggregates, as well as the comparatively slower degradation of tNhtt with longer polyglutamine, decreased the proteasome's availability for degrading other key target proteins, such as p53. This altered proteasomal function was associated with disrupted mitochondrial membrane potential, released cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytosol and activated caspase-9- and caspase-3-like proteases. These results suggest that the impaired proteasomal function plays an important role in polyglutamine protein-induced cell death.
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PMID:Altered proteasomal function due to the expression of polyglutamine-expanded truncated N-terminal huntingtin induces apoptosis by caspase activation through mitochondrial cytochrome c release. 1133 15

In Huntington's Disease (HD), the huntingtin protein (Htt) includes an expanded polyglutamine domain. Since mutant Htt concentrates in the nucleus of affected neurons, we have inquired whether normal Htt (Q16--23) is also able to access the nucleus. We observe that a major pool of normal full-length Htt of HeLa cells is anchored to endosomes and also detect RNase-sensitive nuclear foci which include a 70-kDa N-terminal Htt fragment. Agents which damage DNA trigger caspase-3-dependent cleavage of Htt and dramatically relocate the 70 kDa fragment to the nucleoplasm. Considering that polyglutamine tracts stimulate caspase activation, mutant Htt is therefore poised to enter the nucleus. These considerations help rationalize the nuclear accumulation of Htt which is characteristic of HD and provide a first example of involvement of caspase cleavage in release of membrane-bound proteins which subsequently enter the nucleus.
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PMID:Nuclear relocation of normal huntingtin. 1138 66

Huntington's disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative condition caused by a characteristic mutation in the huntingtin (htt) gene. This gene was identified in 1993. Both the mitochondria and the nucleus play an important role in HD pathology. However, the precise molecular mechanisms remain unclear. A key strategy for understanding HD pathology is to identify signaling cascades initiated by mutant Htt that lead to neuronal cell death and dysfunction. Apoptotic stress induces greater mitochondrial depolarization in HD lymphoblasts than in control subjects. This leads to overactivation of caspase-3, which is capable of cleaving htt. Truncated forms of Htt, which are similar to the caspase-cleaved products in size, exist in the nucleus of HD patient and animal model brains. We hypothesize that caspases, which are activated by mitochondrial depolarization, play a role in producing truncated forms of Htt, which accumulate in the nucleus. Truncated forms of mutant Htt that accumulate in the nucleus are toxic to cells. There is growing evidence that truncated forms of mutant Htt in the nucleus influence gene transcription by binding to proteins such as CREB binding protein (CBP) response element binding protein binding protein, N-COR, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and p53. p53 regulates the transcription of various mitochondrial proteins which may underlie the mitochondrial abnormalities, especially the vulnerability to mitochondrial depolarization, seen in HD tissues. Taken together, we hypothesize a noxious signaling cascade between the mitochondria and the nucleus, initiated by mutant Htt, which may underlie HD pathology.
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PMID:Mechanisms for neuronal cell death and dysfunction in Huntington's disease: pathological cross-talk between the nucleus and the mitochondria? 1146 59

Polyglutamine protein aggregation is associated with eight inherited neurodegenerative disorders. In Huntington's disease, N-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin form intracellular aggregates and mediate cellular toxicity. Recent studies have shown that chaperones inhibit polyglutamine-mediated aggregation and cellular toxicity. Because chaperones also inhibit caspase activation to protect cells from death, it remains unclear whether the protective effect of chaperones on polyglutamine-mediated cellular toxicity is dependent on their inhibition of protein aggregation. In this study, we show that several chaperones including HSP 40, HSP 70, and N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor can inhibit cellular toxicity caused by N-terminal mutant huntingtin fragments. However, only HSP 40 is able to inhibit huntingtin aggregation. Furthermore, time-course study suggests that the protection of chaperones against huntingtin toxicity is not the result of their suppression of huntingtin aggregation. Chaperones inhibit caspase-3 and caspase-9 activation mediated by mutant huntingtin, and this inhibition is independent of huntingtin aggregation. We propose that the inhibition of caspase activity by chaperones is involved in their suppression of polyglutamine toxicity.
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PMID:Chaperone suppression of cellular toxicity of huntingtin is independent of polyglutamine aggregation. 1160 65

Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant condition, resulting from a mutation in huntingtin (htt). Htt is a novel protein, and its normal function is at present not well understood. Nuclear translocation of mutant htt in vitro up-regulates expression of the cell death gene caspase-1. We have demonstrated in a transgenic HD mouse model that caspase-1 and caspase-3 are transcriptionally up-regulated and activated. Underscoring the relevancy of these findings, recent results suggest that caspase-1 is activated in brains of humans with HD. Caspase activation results in the proteolytic cleavage of key cellular targets, including htt, leading to cell dysfunction. Caspase activation leading to cell dysfunction and death correlates with disease progression. In HD-transgenic mice, caspase inhibition resulted in a delayed onset of symptoms, a slowed progression, and prolonged survival. Caspase inhibition is a therapeutic strategy that merits evaluation in humans with HD.
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PMID:Caspases in Huntington's disease. 1176 25

Previous work suggests N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) activation may be involved in degeneration of medium-sized spiny striatal neurons in Huntington's disease (HD). Here we show that these neurons are more vulnerable to NMDAR-mediated death in a YAC transgenic FVB/N mouse model of HD expressing full-length mutant huntingtin, compared with wild-type FVB/N mice. Excitotoxic death of these neurons was increased after intrastriatal injection of quinolinate in vivo, and after NMDA but not AMPA exposure in culture. NMDA-induced cell death was abolished by an NR2B subtype-specific antagonist. In contrast, NMDAR-mediated death of cerebellar granule neurons was not enhanced, consistent with cell-type and NMDAR subtype specificity. Moreover, increased NMDA-evoked current amplitude and caspase-3 activity were observed in transgenic striatal neurons. Our data support a role for NR2B-subtype NMDAR activation as a trigger for selective neuronal degeneration in HD.
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PMID:Increased sensitivity to N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated excitotoxicity in a mouse model of Huntington's disease. 1190 90

It has been postulated that neuronal inclusions composed of mutant huntingtin may play a causative role in the pathogenesis of Huntington's disease. To study the putative role of aggregates in modulating apoptotic vulnerability, SH-SY5Y cell lines stably expressing truncated huntingtin with 18 (wild-type) (N63-18Q) or 82 (mutant) (N63-82Q) glutamine repeats were established. Aggregates were observed in approximately 13% of the N63-82Q cells; no aggregates were observed in the N63-18Q cells. In response to apoptotic stimuli such as staurosporine or hyperosmotic stress, caspase-3 activity was significantly greater in the N63-82Q cells compared to the N63-18Q cells. However, double immunostaining for huntingtin and active caspase-3 revealed that the presence of aggregates did not correlate with the presence of active caspase-3, indicating that aggregates do not contribute to the increase in apoptosis in the N63-82Q cells.
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PMID:Mutant huntingtin aggregates do not sensitize cells to apoptotic stressors. 1194 95

Huntington's disease, with its dominant loss of striatal neurons, is triggered by an expanded glutamine tract in huntingtin. To investigate a proposed role for increased activation of the apoptotic cascade in mutant huntingtin's trigger mechanism, we examined huntingtin cleavage and lesion severity after mild ischemic injury in Hdh(Q92) mice. We found activation of calpain and caspase proteases and proteolysis of huntingtin in lesioned striatum. However, huntingtin fragments resembled products of calpain I, not caspase-3, cleavage and turnover was accompanied by augmented levels of full-length normal and mutant protein. By contrast, the number of apoptotic cells, total and striatal infarct size, and degree of neurologic deficit were similar in Hdh(Q92) and wild-type mice, indicating that the disease process neither strongly protected nor sensitized striatal neurons to apoptotic death. Thus, our findings do not support a role for increased apoptosis or caspase-3 cleavage in the mechanism by which mutant huntingtin triggers disease. However, they suggest that calpain activation and huntingtin regulation merit investigation as modifiers of disease progression in neurons injured by the harmful consequences of full-length mutant huntingtin.
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PMID:The HD mutation does not alter neuronal death in the striatum of Hdh(Q92) knock-in mice after mild focal ischemia. 1246 May 54

Striatal cell death in Huntington's Disease (HD) may involve mitochondrial defects, NMDA-mediated excitotoxicity, and activation of death effector proteases such as caspases and calpain. However, the precise contribution of mitochondrial defects in the activation of these proteases in HD is unknown. Here, we addressed this question by studying the mechanism of striatal cell death in rat models of HD using the mitochondrial complex II inhibitor 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP). The neurotoxin was either given by intraperitoneal injections (acute model) or over 5 d by constant systemic infusion using osmotic pumps (chronic model) to produce either transient or sustained mitochondrial deficits. Caspase-9 activation preceded neurodegeneration in both cases. However, caspase-8 and caspase-3 were activated in the acute model, but not in the chronic model, showing that 3-NP does not require activation of these caspases to produce striatal degeneration. In contrast, activation of calpain was specifically detected in the striatum in both models and this was associated with a calpain-dependent cleavage of huntingtin. Finally, in the chronic model, which mimics a steady blockade of complex II activity reminiscent of HD, selective calpain inhibition prevented the abnormal calpain-dependent processing of huntingtin, reduced the size of the striatal lesions, and almost completely abolished the 3-NP-induced DNA fragmentation in striatal cells. The present results demonstrate that calpain is a predominant effector of striatal cell death associated with mitochondrial defects in vivo. This suggests that calpain may play an important role in HD pathogenesis and could be a potential therapeutic target to slow disease progression.
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PMID:Calpain is a major cell death effector in selective striatal degeneration induced in vivo by 3-nitropropionate: implications for Huntington's disease. 1283 25

Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant progressive neurodegenerative disorder resulting in selective neuronal loss and dysfunction in the striatum and cortex. The molecular pathways leading to the selectivity of neuronal cell death in HD are poorly understood. Proteolytic processing of full-length mutant huntingtin (Htt) and subsequent events may play an important role in the selective neuronal cell death found in this disease. Despite the identification of Htt as a substrate for caspases, it is not known which caspase(s) cleaves Htt in vivo or whether regional expression of caspases contribute to selective neuronal cells loss. Here, we evaluate whether specific caspases are involved in cell death induced by mutant Htt and if this correlates with our recent finding that Htt is cleaved in vivo at the caspase consensus site 552. We find that caspase-2 cleaves Htt selectively at amino acid 552. Further, Htt recruits caspase-2 into an apoptosome-like complex. Binding of caspase-2 to Htt is polyglutamine repeat-length dependent, and therefore may serve as a critical initiation step in HD cell death. This hypothesis is supported by the requirement of caspase-2 for the death of mouse primary striatal cells derived from HD transgenic mice expressing full-length Htt (YAC72). Expression of catalytically inactive (dominant-negative) forms of caspase-2, caspase-7, and to some extent caspase-6, reduced the cell death of YAC72 primary striatal cells, while the catalytically inactive forms of caspase-3, -8, and -9 did not. Histological analysis of post-mortem human brain tissue and YAC72 mice revealed activation of caspases and enhanced caspase-2 immunoreactivity in medium spiny neurons of the striatum and the cortical projection neurons when compared to controls. Further, upregulation of caspase-2 correlates directly with decreased levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the cortex and striatum of 3-month YAC72 transgenic mice and therefore suggests that these changes are early events in HD pathogenesis. These data support the involvement of caspase-2 in the selective neuronal cell death associated with HD in the striatum and cortex.
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PMID:Specific caspase interactions and amplification are involved in selective neuronal vulnerability in Huntington's disease. 1471 58


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