Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.22.60 (
caspase-7
)
920
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pericytes, which surround endothelial cells in precapillary arterioles, capillaries, and postcapillary venules, are important for the development, maturation, and maintenance of the vascular system. Pericytes are also pluripotent cells that can differentiate into a variety of mesenchymal cells including smooth muscle cells and osteoblasts. Possibly because of their vasculature regulating activities and ability to differentiate in situ, pericytes are implicated in several diseases with vascular complications, including diabetic retinopathy, as well as Reynaud's Syndrome, central nervous system dementias, and vascular calcification among others. Statin drugs, which block the conversion of
HMG-CoA
to mevalonate in the cholesterol synthesis pathway, are known to have apoptotic and growth inhibitory effects on cells in vitro and complex pleiotropic effects on cells and tissues in vivo. Recently, evidence has emerged that statin drug use in human patients results in a significant 20% reduction in cancer incidence. It is not known whether these results are due to direct statin action on normal tissue, growth inhibitory/pro-apoptotic effects on tumor cells, and/or effects on angiogenesis. Because of the role of pericytes in angiogenesis and the effects of statins on cancer incidence, we tested the direct effects of statins on pericytes. Specifically, we demonstrate that 3 statins, simvastatin, lovastatin, and mevastatin induce dose-dependent apoptosis in the TR-PCT1 pericyte cell line, that simvastatin (empirically shown to be the most potent of the 3 statins) induces similar levels of apoptosis in freshly isolated pericytes, and that simvastatin-induced apoptosis in pericytes is cholesterol, caspase-3, and
caspase-7
mediated.
...
PMID:HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors induce apoptosis in pericytes. 1642 97
3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-CoA
reductase inhibitors (statins) are cholesterol-lowering drugs that exert other cellular effects and underlie their beneficial health effects, including those associated with myocardial remodeling. We recently demonstrated that statins induces apoptosis and autophagy in human lung mesenchymal cells. Here, we extend our knowledge showing that statins simultaneously induces activation of the apoptosis, autophagy and the unfolded protein response (UPR) in primary human atrial fibroblasts (hATF). Thus we tested the degree to which coordination exists between signaling from mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum and lysosomes during response to simvastatin exposure. Pharmacologic blockade of the activation of ER-dependent cysteine-dependent aspartate-directed protease (caspase)-4 and lysosomal cathepsin-B and -L significantly decreased simvastatin-induced cell death. Simvastatin altered total abundance and the mitochondrial fraction of proapoptotic and antiapoptotic proteins, while c-Jun N-terminal kinase/stress-activated protein kinase mediated effects on B-cell lymphoma 2 expression. Chemical inhibition of autophagy flux with bafilomycin-A1 augmented simvastatin-induced caspase activation, UPR and cell death. In mouse embryonic fibroblasts that are deficient in autophagy protein 5 and refractory to autophagy induction,
caspase-7
and UPR were hyper-induced upon treatment with simvastatin. These data demonstrate that mevalonate cascade inhibition-induced death of hATF manifests from a complex mechanism involving co-regulation of apoptosis, autophagy and UPR. Furthermore, autophagy has a crucial role in determining the extent of ER stress, UPR and permissiveness of hATF to cell death induced by statins.
...
PMID:Apoptosis, autophagy and ER stress in mevalonate cascade inhibition-induced cell death of human atrial fibroblasts. 2271 85