Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.61 (caspase-8)
6,833 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report here the purification of a cytosolic protein that induces cytochrome c release from mitochondria in response to caspase-8, the apical caspase activated by cell surface death receptors such as Fas and TNF. Peptide mass fingerprinting identified this protein as Bid, a BH3 domain-containing protein known to interact with both Bcl2 and Bax. Caspase-8 cleaves Bid, and the COOH-terminal part translocates to mitochondria where it triggers cytochrome c release. Immunodepletion of Bid from cell extracts eliminated the cytochrome c releasing activity. The cytochrome c releasing activity of Bid was antagonized by Bcl2. A mutation at the BH3 domain diminished its cytochrome c releasing activity. Bid, therefore, relays an apoptotic signal from the cell surface to mitochondria.
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PMID:Bid, a Bcl2 interacting protein, mediates cytochrome c release from mitochondria in response to activation of cell surface death receptors. 972 91

Apoptosis is induced by different stimuli, among them triggering of the death receptor CD95, staurosporine, and chemotherapeutic drugs. In all cases, apoptosis is mediated by caspases, although it is unclear how these diverse apoptotic stimuli cause protease activation. Two regulatory pathways have been recently identified, but it remains unknown whether they are functionally independent or linked to each other. One is mediated by recruitment of the proximal regulator caspase-8 to the death receptor complex. The other pathway is controlled by the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria and the subsequent ATP-dependent activation of the death regulator apoptotic protease-activating factor 1 (Apaf-1). Here, we report that both pathways can be dissected by depletion of intracellular ATP. Prevention of ATP production completely inhibited caspase activation and apoptosis in response to chemotherapeutic drugs and staurosporine. Interestingly, caspase-8, whose function appeared to be restricted to death receptors, was also activated by these drugs under normal conditions, but not after ATP depletion. In contrast, inhibition of ATP production did not affect caspase activation after triggering of CD95. These results suggest that chemotherapeutic drug-induced caspase activation is entirely controlled by a receptor-independent mitochondrial pathway, whereas CD95-induced apoptosis can be regulated by a separate pathway not requiring Apaf-1 function.
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PMID:Differential regulation and ATP requirement for caspase-8 and caspase-3 activation during CD95- and anticancer drug-induced apoptosis. 973 Aug 99

Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) binding to the TNF receptor (TNFR) potentially initiates apoptosis and activates the transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB), which suppresses apoptosis by an unknown mechanism. The activation of NF-kappaB was found to block the activation of caspase-8. TRAF1 (TNFR-associated factor 1), TRAF2, and the inhibitor-of-apoptosis (IAP) proteins c-IAP1 and c-IAP2 were identified as gene targets of NF-kappaB transcriptional activity. In cells in which NF-kappaB was inactive, all of these proteins were required to fully suppress TNF-induced apoptosis, whereas c-IAP1 and c-IAP2 were sufficient to suppress etoposide-induced apoptosis. Thus, NF-kappaB activates a group of gene products that function cooperatively at the earliest checkpoint to suppress TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis and that function more distally to suppress genotoxic agent-mediated apoptosis.
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PMID:NF-kappaB antiapoptosis: induction of TRAF1 and TRAF2 and c-IAP1 and c-IAP2 to suppress caspase-8 activation. 973 16

Recent experimental evidence suggests that apoptosis pathways such as the CD95 system are an important mediator of chemotherapy-induced apoptosis in various tumor cell lines. Therapeutic concentrations of cytotoxic drugs induce CD95 and CD95-L that mediates apoptosis via an autocrine/paracrine loop by crosslinking CD95. Interfering with CD95-L/receptor interaction by antagonistic antibodies to the receptor or by inhibition of CD95-L expression strongly reduces apoptosis. Drug-induced apoptosis critically depends on activation of caspases since apoptosis is almost completely abrogated by the caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk. The receptor apical caspase FLICE/MACH (caspase-8) and the downstream caspase CPP32 (caspase-3) are cleaved resulting in processing of substrates such as the nuclear enzyme PARP. In addition, the response to cytotoxic drugs is modulated by pro- and antiapoptotic proteins of the Bcl-2 family and p53. Defects in apoptosis pathways, e.g. deficient upregulation of CD95-L, downregulation of CD95 expression or blockade of caspase activation may confer resistance to cytotoxic drug treatment. Thus, chemosensitivity of tumor cells depends on intact apoptosis pathways such as the CD95 system that are activated by chemotherapeutic drugs. These findings may have implications for drug sensitivity and resistance of tumor cells.
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PMID:Molecular determinants of apoptosis induced by cytotoxic drugs. 974 44

Toxins convert the hepatocellular response to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) stimulation from proliferation to cell death, suggesting that hepatotoxins somehow sensitize hepatocytes to TNF-alpha toxicity. Because nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activation confers resistance to TNF-alpha cytotoxicity in nonhepatic cells, the possibility that toxin-induced sensitization to TNF-alpha killing results from inhibition of NF-kappaB-dependent gene expression was examined in the RALA rat hepatocyte cell line sensitized to TNF-alpha cytotoxicity by actinomycin D (ActD). ActD did not affect TNF-alpha-induced hepatocyte NF-kappaB activation but decreased NF-kappaB-dependent gene expression. Expression of an IkappaB superrepressor rendered RALA hepatocytes sensitive to TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis in the absence of ActD. Apoptosis was blocked by caspase inhibitors, and TNF-alpha treatment led to activation of caspase-2, caspase-3, and caspase-8 only when NF-kappaB activation was blocked. Although apoptosis was blocked by the NF-kappaB-dependent factor nitric oxide (NO), inhibition of endogenous NO production did not sensitize cells to TNF-alpha-induced cytotoxicity. Thus NF-kappaB activation is the critical intracellular signal that determines whether TNF-alpha stimulates hepatocyte proliferation or apoptosis. Although exogenous NO blocks RALA hepatocyte TNF-alpha cytotoxicity, endogenous production of NO is not the mechanism by which NF-kappaB activation inhibits this death pathway.
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PMID:NF-kappaB inactivation converts a hepatocyte cell line TNF-alpha response from proliferation to apoptosis. 975 59

The apoptotic signal triggered by ligation of members of the death receptor family is promoted by sequential activation of caspase zymogens. We show here that in a purified system, the initiator caspases-8 and -10 directly process the executioner pro-caspase-3 with activation rates (kcat/Km) of 8.7 x 10(5) and 2.8 x 10(5) M-1 s-1, respectively. These rates are of sufficient magnitude to indicate direct processing in vivo. Differentially processed forms of caspase-3 that accumulate during its activation have similar rates of activation, activities, and specificities. The pattern and rate of caspase-8 induced activation of pro-caspase-3 in cytosolic extracts was the same as in a purified system. Moreover, immunodepletion of a putative intermediary in the pathway to activation, pro-caspase-9, was without consequence. Taken together these data demonstrate that the initiator caspase-8 can directly activate pro-caspase-3 without the requirement for an accelerator. The in vitro data thus help to deconvolute previous in vivo transfection studies which have debated the role of a direct versus indirect transmission of the apoptotic signal generated by ligation of death receptors.
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PMID:Pro-caspase-3 is a major physiologic target of caspase-8. 976 24

Chlorambucil and prednisolone, two commonly used drugs in the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), induce apoptosis in CLL cells. We have investigated the involvement in this apoptotic cell death of caspases, which cleave critical cellular substrates thereby acting as the executioners of the apoptotic process. Induction of spontaneous or chlorambucil/prednisolone-induced apoptosis of freshly isolated B-CLL cells in culture resulted in the activation of the 'effector' caspases, -3 and -7, but generally not of caspase-2. Activation of caspases-3 and -7 was accompanied by the proteolysis of the DNA repair enzyme, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. Induction of apoptosis was also accompanied by the processing of caspase-8, the extent of which varied between patients. Induction of apoptosis and processing of all the caspases was inhibited by the cell permeable caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp (OMe) fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD.fmk). Our results demonstrate a key role for the activation and processing of caspases in the execution phase of apoptosis in CLL cells. Apoptosis of CLL cells resulted in the selective activation of some but not all caspases. Our results suggest that the dysregulation of apoptosis observed in CLL may be due to the signalling leading to the activation of caspases rather than a deletion of pro-caspases. High levels of caspase-8 in CLL cells in conjunction with low levels of CD95 receptor may offer new therapeutic opportunities for the treatment of CLL.
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PMID:Processing/activation of caspases, -3 and -7 and -8 but not caspase-2, in the induction of apoptosis in B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. 976 99

Apoptosis mediated by anticancer drugs may involve activation of death-inducing ligand/receptor systems such as CD95 (APO-1/Fas), cleavage of caspases, and perturbance of mitochondrial functions. We investigated the sequence of these events in SHEP neuroblastoma cells transfected with Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) using two different drugs, namely, doxorubicin (Doxo), which activates the CD95/CD95 ligand (CD95-L) system, and betulinic acid (Bet A), which does not enhance the expression of CD95 or CD95-L and which, as shown here, directly targets mitochondria. Apoptosis induced by both drugs was inhibited by Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) overexpression or by bongkrekic acid, an agent that stabilizes mitochondrial membrane barrier function, suggesting a critical role for mitochondria. After Doxo treatment, enhanced CD95/CD95-L expression and caspase-8 activation were not blocked by Bcl-2 or Bcl-X(L) and were found in cells with a mitochondrial transmembrane potential (delta psi(m)) that was still normal (delta psi(m)high cells). In marked contrast, after Bet A treatment, caspase-8 activation occurred in a Bcl-2- or Bcl-X(L)-inhibitable fashion and was confined to cells that had lost their delta psi(m) (delta psi(m)low cells). Mitochondria from cells treated with either Doxo or Bet A induced cleavage of both caspase-8 and caspase-3 in cytosolic extracts. Thus, caspase-8 activation may occur upstream or downstream of mitochondria, depending on the apoptosis-initiating stimulus. In contrast to caspase-8, cleavage of caspase-3 or poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase was always restricted to delta psi(m)low cells, downstream of the Bcl-2- or Bcl-X(L)-controlled checkpoint of apoptosis. Cytochrome c, released from mitochondria undergoing permeability transition, activated caspase-3 but not caspase-8 in a cell-free system. However, both caspases were activated by apoptosis-inducing factor, indicating that the mechanism of caspase-8 activation differed from that of caspase-3 activation. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that perturbance of mitochondrial function constitutes a central coordinating event in drug-induced cell death.
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PMID:Molecular ordering of apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs in neuroblastoma cells. 976 78

The CD95 signaling pathway comprises proteins that contain one or two death effector domains (DED), such as FADD/Mort1 or caspase-8. Here we describe a novel 37 kDa protein, DEDD, that contains an N-terminal DED. DEDD is highly conserved between human and mouse (98. 7% identity) and is ubiquitously expressed. Overexpression of DEDD in 293T cells induced weak apoptosis, mainly through its DED by which it interacts with FADD and caspase-8. Endogenous DEDD was found in the cytoplasm and translocated into the nucleus upon stimulation of CD95. Immunocytological studies revealed that overexpressed DEDD directly translocated into the nucleus, where it co-localizes in the nucleolus with UBF, a basal factor required for RNA polymerase I transcription. Consistent with its nuclear localization, DEDD contains two nuclear localization signals and the C-terminal part shares sequence homology with histones. Recombinant DEDD binds to both DNA and reconstituted mononucleosomes and inhibits transcription in a reconstituted in vitro system. The results suggest that DEDD is a final target of a chain of events by which the CD95-induced apoptotic signal is transferred into the nucleolus to shut off cellular biosynthetic activities.
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PMID:DEDD, a novel death effector domain-containing protein, targeted to the nucleolus. 977 41

FLICE-inhibitory protein, FLIP (Casper/I-FLICE/FLAME-1/CASH/CLARP/MRIT), which contains two death effector domains and an inactive caspase domain, binds to FADD and caspase-8, and thereby inhibits death receptor-mediated apoptosis. Here, we characterize the inhibitory effect of FLIP on a variety of apoptotic pathways. Human Jurkat T cells undergoing Fas ligand-mediated apoptosis in response to CD3 activation were completely resistant when transfected with FLIP. In contrast, the presence of FLIP did not affect apoptosis induced by granzyme B in combination with adenovirus or perforin. Moreover, the Fas ligand, but not the perforin/granzyme B-dependent lytic pathway of CTL, was inhibited by FLIP. Apoptosis mediated by chemotherapeutic drugs (i.e., doxorubicin, etoposide, and vincristine) and gamma irradiation was not affected by FLIP or the absence of Fas, indicating that these treatments can induce cell death in a Fas-independent and FLIP-insensitive manner.
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PMID:FLIP prevents apoptosis induced by death receptors but not by perforin/granzyme B, chemotherapeutic drugs, and gamma irradiation. 978 Jan 61


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