Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.4.22.61 (
caspase-8
)
6,833
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Survivin is a member of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family. We investigated the antiapoptotic mechanism of Survivin, as well as its expression in 60 human tumor cell lines used for the National Cancer Institute's anticancer drug screening program. In cotransfection experiments, cell death induced by Bax or Fas (CD 95) was partially inhibited (mean +/- SD, 65% +/- 8%) by Survivin, whereas XIAP, another IAP family member, almost completely blocked cell death (93% +/- 4%) under the same conditions. Survivin and XIAP also protected 293 cells from apoptosis induced by overexpression of procaspase-3 and -7 and inhibited the processing of these zymogens into active caspases. In vitro binding experiments indicated that, like other IAP-family proteins, Survivin binds specifically to the terminal effector cell death proteases, caspase-3 and -7, but not to the proximal initiator protease
caspase-8
. Using a cell-free system in which cytosolic extracts were derived from control- or Survivin-transfected cells and where caspases were activated either by addition of
cytochrome c
and dATP or by adding recombinant active
caspase-8
, Survivin was able to substantially reduce caspase activity, as measured by cleavage of a tetrapeptide substrate, AspGluValAsp-aminofluorocoumarin. Similar results were obtained in intact cells when Survivin was overexpressed by gene transfection and caspase activation was induced by the anticancer drug etoposide. Survivin was expressed in all 60 cancer cell lines analyzed, with highest levels in breast and lung cancers and lowest levels in renal cancers. These findings indicate that Survivin, which is commonly expressed in human tumor cell lines, can bind the effector cell death proteases caspase-3 and -7 in vitro and inhibits caspase activity and cell death in cells exposed to diverse apoptotic stimuli. Although quantitative differences may exist, these observations suggest commonality in the mechanisms used by IAP-family proteins to suppress apoptosis.
...
PMID:IAP-family protein survivin inhibits caspase activity and apoptosis induced by Fas (CD95), Bax, caspases, and anticancer drugs. 985 56
Different classes of anticancer drugs may trigger apoptosis by acting on different subcellular targets and by activating distinct signaling pathways. Here, we report that betulinic acid (BetA) is a prototype cytotoxic agent that triggers apoptosis by a direct effect on mitochondria. In isolated mitochondria, BetA directly induces loss of transmembrane potential independent of a benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone-inhibitable caspase. This is inhibited by bongkrekic acid, an agent that stabilizes the permeability transition pore complex. Mitochondria undergoing BetA-induced permeability transition mediate cleavage of
caspase-8
(FLICE/
MACH
/
Mch5
) and caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama) in a cell-free system. Soluble factors such as
cytochrome c
or apoptosis-inducing factor released from BetA-treated mitochondria are sufficient for cleavage of caspases and nuclear fragmentation. Addition of
cytochrome c
to cytosolic extracts results in cleavage of caspase-3, but not of
caspase-8
. However, supernatants of mitochondria, which have undergone permeability transition, and partially purified apoptosis-inducing factor activate both
caspase-8
and caspase-3 in cytosolic extracts and suffice to activate recombinant
caspase-8
. These findings show that induction of mitochondrial permeability transition alone is sufficient to trigger the full apoptosis program and that some cytotoxic drugs such as BetA may induce apoptosis via a direct effect on mitochondria.
...
PMID:Activation of mitochondria and release of mitochondrial apoptogenic factors by betulinic acid. 985 46
"BH3 domain only" members of the BCL-2 family including the pro-apoptotic molecule BID represent candidates to connect with proximal signal transduction. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) treatment induced a caspase-mediated cleavage of cytosolic, inactive p22 BID at internal Asp sites to yield a major p15 and minor p13 and p11 fragments. p15 BID translocates to mitochondria as an integral membrane protein. p15 BID within cytosol targeted normal mitochondria and released
cytochrome c
. Immunodepletion of p15 BID prevents
cytochrome c
release. In vivo, anti-Fas Ab results in the appearance of p15 BID in the cytosol of hepatocytes which translocates to mitochondria where it releases
cytochrome c
. Addition of activated
caspase-8
to normal cytosol generates p15 BID which is also required in this system for release of
cytochrome c
. In the presence of BCL-XL/BCL-2, TNFalpha still induced BID cleavage and p15 BID became an integral mitochondrial membrane protein. However, BCL-XL/BCL-2 prevented the release of
cytochrome c
, yet other aspects of mitochondrial dysfunction still transpired and cells died nonetheless. Thus, while BID appears to be required for the release of
cytochrome c
in the TNF death pathway, the release of
cytochrome c
may not be required for cell death.
...
PMID:Caspase cleaved BID targets mitochondria and is required for cytochrome c release, while BCL-XL prevents this release but not tumor necrosis factor-R1/Fas death. 987 64
Release of
cytochrome c
is important in many forms of apoptosis. Recent studies of CD95 (Fas/APO-1)-induced apoptosis have implicated
caspase-8
cleavage of Bid, a BH3 domain-containing proapoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family, in this release. We now demonstrate that both receptor-induced (CD95 and tumor necrosis factor) and chemical-induced apoptosis result in a similar time-dependent activation of caspases-3, -7, -8, and -9 in Jurkat T cells and human leukemic U937 cells. In receptor-mediated apoptosis, the caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD. FMK), inhibits apoptosis prior to commitment to cell death by inhibiting the upstream activator
caspase-8
, cleavage of Bid, release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
, processing of effector caspases, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, and externalization of phosphatidylserine. However, Z-VAD.FMK inhibits chemical-induced apoptosis at a stage after commitment to cell death by inhibiting the initiator caspase-9 and the resultant postmitochondrial activation of effector caspases. Cleavage of Bid but not release of
cytochrome c
is blocked by Z-VAD.FMK demonstrating that in chemical-induced apoptosis
cytochrome c
release is caspase-independent and is not mediated by activation of Bid. We propose that caspases form an integral part of the cell death-inducing mechanism in receptor-mediated apoptosis, whereas in chemical-induced apoptosis they act solely as executioners of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Distinct caspase cascades are initiated in receptor-mediated and chemical-induced apoptosis. 998 52
Apoptosis, induced in human monocytic THP.1 cells by etoposide and N-tosyl-L-phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone, was accompanied by the processing/activation of caspases, externalisation of phosphatidylserine (PS) and reduction in mitochondrial membrane potential (delta psi(m)). Activation of caspase(s) occurred prior to both PS exposure and reduction in delta psi(m). The caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp (OMe) fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD.fmk) blocked the activation of caspases, PS exposure and the reduction in delta psi(m) as well as the morphological changes associated with apoptosis but it did not inhibit the release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. These results suggest that the execution phase of chemical-induced apoptosis in THP.1 cells may be initiated following mitochondrial damage resulting in release of
cytochrome c
leading to activation of caspase-9 and then activation of effector caspases-3 and -7. This contrasts to receptor-mediated apoptosis, such as Fas, which results in an initial activation of
caspase-8
.
...
PMID:Release of mitochondrial cytochrome c is upstream of caspase activation in chemical-induced apoptosis in human monocytic tumour cells. 1002 43
Amplification of the MYCN gene is found in a large proportion of neuroblastoma and considered as an adverse prognostic factor. To investigate the effect of ectopic MycN expression on the susceptibility of neuroblastoma cells to cytotoxic drugs we used a human neuroblastoma cell line harboring tetracycline-controlled expression of MycN. Neither conditional expression of MycN alone nor low drug concentrations triggered apoptosis. However, when acting in concert, MycN and cytotoxic drugs efficiently induced cell death. Apoptosis depended on mitochondrial permeability transition and activation of caspases, since the mitochondrion-specific inhibitor bongkrekic acid and the caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk almost completely abrogated apoptosis. Loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential and release of
cytochrome c
from mitochondria preceded activation of
caspase-8
and caspase-3 and cleavage of PARP. CD95 expression was upregulated by treatment with cytotoxic drugs, while MycN cooperated with cytotoxic drugs to increase sensitivity to CD95-induced apoptosis and enhancing CD95-L expression. MycN overexpression and cytotoxic drugs also synergized to induce p53 and Bax protein expression, while Bcl-2 and Bcl-X(L) protein levels remained unchanged. Since amplification of MYCN is usually associated with a poor prognosis, these findings suggest that dysfunctions in apoptosis pathways may be a mechanism by which MycN-induced apoptosis of neuroblastoma cells is inhibited.
...
PMID:MycN sensitizes neuroblastoma cells for drug-induced apoptosis. 1005 Aug 84
Apoptosis is mediated by members of the caspase family of proteases which can be activated by release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. Additional members of the caspase family are activated at the cell surface in response to direct stimulus from the external environment such as by activation of the Fas receptor. It has been suggested that these upstream caspases directly activate the downstream caspases which would obviate a role for
cytochrome c
in apoptosis induced by the Fas receptor. We demonstrate that
cytochrome c
is released from mitochondria of Jurkat cells in response to both staurosporine and an agonistic anti-Fas antibody and that only the latter is inhibited by the caspase inhibitor z-VAD-FMK. This suggests that an upstream caspase such as
caspase-8
is required for the Fas-mediated release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. The protein phosphatase inhibitor calyculin A prevented
cytochrome c
release and apoptosis induced by both agents, suggesting that release of
cytochrome c
is required in both models. Zinc, once thought of as an endonuclease inhibitor, has previously been shown to prevent the activation of caspase-3. We show that zinc prevents the activation of downstream caspases and apoptosis induced by both insults, yet does not prevent release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. The ability of calyculin A and zinc to prevent DNA digestion implies that the mitochondrial pathway is important for induction of apoptosis by both agents. These results do not support an alternative pathway in which
caspase-8
directly activates caspase-3. These results also demonstrate that a critical protein phosphatase regulates the release of
cytochrome c
and apoptosis induced by both insults.
...
PMID:The temporal relationship between protein phosphatase, mitochondrial cytochrome c release, and caspase activation in apoptosis. 1006 78
To evaluate the role of ceramide (Cer) in apoptosis signaling, we examined Cer formation induced by CD95, etoposide, or gamma-radiation (IR) in relation to caspase activation and mitochondrial changes in Jurkat T cells. The Cer response to all three stimuli was mapped in between caspases sensitive to benzoyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk) and acetyl-DEVD-aldehyde (DEVD-CHO). Cer production was independent of nuclear fragmentation but associated with the occurrence of other aspects of the apoptotic morphology. Caspase-8 inhibition abrogated Cer formation and apoptosis induced by CD95 but did not affect the response to etoposide or IR, placing CD95-induced Cer formation downstream from
caspase-8
and excluding a role for
caspase-8
in the DNA damage pathways. CD95 signaling to the mitochondria required
caspase-8
, whereas
cytochrome c
release in response to DNA damage was caspase-independent. These results indicate that the caspases required for the Cer response to etoposide and IR reside at or downstream from the mitochondria. Bcl-2 overexpression abrogated the Cer response to etoposide and IR and reduced CD95-induced Cer accumulation. We conclude that the Cer response to DNA damage fully depends on mitochondrion-dependent caspases, whereas the response to CD95 partially relies on these caspases. Our data imply that Cer is not instrumental in the activation of inducer caspases or signaling to the mitochondria. Rather, Cer formation is associated with the execution phase of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and mitochondrial changes during CD95- and DNA damage-induced apoptosis. 1019 69
Mistletoe lectin I (ML-I) is a major active component in plant extracts of Viscum album that is increasingly used in adjuvant cancer therapy. ML-I exerts potent immunomodulating and cytotoxic effects, although its mechanism of action is largely unknown. We show that treatment of leukemic T- and B-cell lines with ML-I induced apoptosis, which required the prior activation of proteases of the caspase family. The involvement of caspases is demonstrated because (a) a peptide caspase inhibitor almost completely prevented ML-I-induced cell death and (b) proteolytic activation of
caspase-8
, caspase-9, and caspase-3 was observed. Because
caspase-8
has been implicated as a regulator of apoptosis mediated by death receptors, we further investigated a potential receptor involvement in ML-I-induced effects. Cell death triggered by ML-I was neither attenuated in cell clones resistant to CD95 nor in cells that were rendered refractory to other death receptors by overexpressing a dominant-negative FADD mutant. In contrast, ML-I triggered a receptor-independent mitochondria-controlled apoptotic pathway because it rapidly induced the release of
cytochrome c
into the cytosol. Because ML-I was also observed to enhance the cytotoxic effect of chemotherapeutic drugs, these data may provide a molecular basis for clinical trials using MLs in anticancer therapy.
...
PMID:Mistletoe lectin activates caspase-8/FLICE independently of death receptor signaling and enhances anticancer drug-induced apoptosis. 1023 92
The death receptor CD95 (APO-1/Fas), the anticancer drug etoposide, and gamma-radiation induce apoptosis in the human T cell line Jurkat. Variant clones selected for resistance to CD95-induced apoptosis proved cross-resistant to etoposide- and radiation-induced apoptosis, suggesting that the apoptosis pathways induced by these distinct stimuli have critical component(s) in common. The pathways do not converge at the level of CD95 ligation or
caspase-8
signaling. Whereas
caspase-8
function was required for CD95-mediated
cytochrome c
release, effector caspase activation, and apoptosis, these responses were unaffected in etoposide-treated and irradiated cells when
caspase-8
was inhibited by FLIPL. Both effector caspase processing and
cytochrome c
release were inhibited in the resistant variant cells as well as in Bcl-2 transfectants, suggesting that, in Jurkat cells, the apoptosis signaling pathways activated by CD95, etoposide, and gamma-radiation are under common mitochondrial control. All three stimuli induced ceramide production in wild-type cells, but not in resistant variant cells. Exogenous ceramide bypassed apoptosis resistance in the variant cells, but not in Bcl-2-transfected cells, suggesting that apoptosis signaling induced by CD95, etoposide, and gamma-radiation is subject to common regulation at a level different from that targeted by Bcl-2.
...
PMID:Common regulation of apoptosis signaling induced by CD95 and the DNA-damaging stimuli etoposide and gamma-radiation downstream from caspase-8 activation. 1031 46
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