Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.62 (caspase-9)
7,507 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To identify the genes involved in cervical carcinogenesis, we applied the mRNA differential display method and identified a candidate tumor suppressor gene, HCCS-1, which was present in normal cervical tissue but absent in cervical cancer, metastatic lymph node and CUMC-6 cervical cancer cell line. HCCS-1 transcripts were expressed in many normal tissues including leukocyte, lung, spleen, liver, heart and uterine cervix. Its expression was absent in 8 human cancer cell lines. HCCS-1-transfected HeLa cells exhibited growth inhibition by about 50%. This inhibitory effect of HCCS-1 on cervical cancer cells was associated with apoptotic process including DNA fragmentation. HCCS-1-transfected HeLa cells were shown to release cytochrome c from mitochondria, which activates caspase-9 and -3 and finally results in cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Apoptosis formation was detected by propidium-iodide/annexin V. HCCS-1-transfected HeLa cells were more sensitive to adriamycin or UVC ray triggered apoptosis. These results suggest that HCCS-1 is downregulated in multiple human tumor types and may serve as a candidate tumor suppressor gene through apoptotic pathway against human cervical cancer.
Int J Cancer 2002 Feb 20
PMID:Candidate tumor suppressor, HCCS-1, is downregulated in human cancers and induces apoptosis in cervical cancer. 1185 54

Despite the high frequency of prostate cancer, therapeutic options for advanced disease are limited to chemotherapy, radiation or hormonal therapy and eventually fail in all patients. Therefore, alternative approaches need to be developed. We previously reported that FTY720, a metabolite from Isaria sinclarii, is a unique antitumor agent for an androgen-independent prostate cancer cell line and requires caspase-3 activation in apoptosis. In our study, we have evaluated the effect of FTY720 on a family of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), focal adhesion kinase (FAK), mitochondrial transmembrane potential, caspase-9 and caspase-8 and analyzed the expression of some cell-cycle regulator proteins in DU145 cells in order to understand the various antitumor effects of FTY720. Apoptosis was quantified by phosphatidylserine exposure. Activation of MAPKs, cleavage of caspase-9 and caspase-8, status of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and Cip1/p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, were evaluated by Western blot analysis, in addition to FAK and phospho-FAK immunoprecipitation and cell-cycle analysis by FACScan. We found that in DU145 cells, 40 microM FTY720 caused activation of p38 MAPK and the upstream kinase MKK3/MKK6 but not SAPK/JNK. Mitochondrial transmembrane potential, FAK and ERK1/2 were reduced while caspase-9 and caspase-8 were cleaved. The p38-specific inhibitor had no effect on apoptosis induced by FTY720, whereas z-VAD.FMK, a broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor, did not inhibit the p38 MAPK activation. An amount of 20 microM FTY720 resulted in G(1) arrest and a decrease of CDK2 as well as CDK4, whereas it induced Cip1/p21. FTY720 may exert anticarcinogenic effects against prostate cancer cells possibly involving modulation of mitogenic signaling, cell-cycle regulators, induction of G(1) arrest and apoptotic death in DU145 cells.
Int J Cancer 2002 Mar 10
PMID:Anticarcinogenic effect of FTY720 in human prostate carcinoma DU145 cells: modulation of mitogenic signaling, FAK, cell-cycle entry and apoptosis. 1185 3

Mutation of the p53 gene plays a critical role in the development of cancer and response to cancer therapy. To analyze the mechanism of cancer development and to improve cancer therapy, it is important to assess which genes are downstream components of p53 in cancers, and whether the expression levels of these genes affect p53-mediated apoptosis. In this study, we transduced the wild type p53 gene along with the Apaf-1 and caspase-9 genes via adenovirus vectors into U251 and U-373MG glioma cells harbouring a mutated p53, and evaluated the degree of apoptosis. Co-induction of Apaf-1 and caspase-9 genes highly enhanced p53-mediated apoptosis in glioma cells. Induction of wild type p53 enhanced the expression levels of Bax, p21/WAF1, and Fas protein. To determine which gene is activated by wild type p53 induction and, in turn, activates Apaf-1 and caspase-9, we transduced the Bax, p21/WAF1 or Fas gene via adenovirus vector to U251 cells to achieve a similar expression level as that induced by the Adv for p53 in U251 cells. U251 cells transduced with Fas concomitant with the Apaf-1 and caspase-9 genes underwent drastic apoptosis. This suggests that induction of wild type p53 upregulates Fas, which in turn may play a role in the activation of Apaf-1 and caspase-9. These results are important for analyzing the mechanism of tumour development and for predicting the therapeutic effect of p53 replacement gene therapy in a particular patient.
Br J Cancer 2002 Feb 12
PMID:Co-transduction of Apaf-1 and caspase-9 highly enhances p53-mediated apoptosis in gliomas. 1187 May 42

Cells deficient in DNA polymerase beta (beta-pol) are impaired in base excision repair (BER) and hypersensitive to various DNA damaging agents, including methylating mutagens. Hypersensitivity of beta-pol-deficient cells to methylating agents is because of induction of apoptosis (Ochs et al., Cancer Res., 59: 1544-1551, 1999), indicating incompletely repaired DNA damage to trigger the response. Here we show that defective BER in beta-pol-null cells results in an early and transient increase in the frequency of DNA single-strand breaks on treatment with methyl methanesulfonate. These breaks arising as repair intermediates are not likely to trigger apoptosis directly because they were repaired efficiently and generated both in resting and proliferating cells, whereas only proliferating cells underwent with high frequency apoptosis after methylation. Therefore, we propose that single-strand breaks are converted into another kind of critical apoptosis-triggering lesion during replication. These critical secondary DNA lesions are likely to be non-repaired DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), which are formed at higher frequency in beta-pol-null than in wild-type cells. Apoptosis was a late response not detectable before 24 h after methylation and was preceded by DSBs formation, extensive chromosomal breakage, and decline in Bcl-2 level and caspase-9 and caspase-3 activation. Caspase-8 was not significantly activated. Transfection of beta-pol-null cells with bcl-2 protected against methylation-induced apoptosis, indicating Bcl-2 to be causally involved. Overall, the data demonstrate that in cells lacking beta-pol, defective BER results in incompletely repaired DNA damage, which triggers apoptosis in a replication-dependent way by activating the mitochondrial death pathway. It is suggested that DSBs act as a critical ultimate apoptosis-inducing lesion.
Cancer Res 2002 Mar 01
PMID:Deficiency in DNA polymerase beta provokes replication-dependent apoptosis via DNA breakage, Bcl-2 decline and caspase-3/9 activation. 1188 30

The cornerstone of the systemic treatment of advanced colorectal cancer is 5-fluorouracil.However, 5-fluorouracil-induced apoptosis is dependent on p53, a tumor suppressor gene that is lost or inactivated in at least 85% of human colorectal cancers. Here we show that tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)/Apo2L triggers caspase-8-mediated truncation of BID, mitochondrial activation of caspase-9, and apoptosis in both p53(+/+) or p53(-/-) isogenic HCT116 colorectal cancer cells. TRAIL/Apo2L also sensitizes both p53(+/+) or p53(-/-) colorectal cancer cells to ionizing radiation. In contrast, we find that TRAIL/Apo2L fails to activate caspase-9 or induce apoptosis in isogenic HCT116 colorectal cancer cells that are deficient in BAX, a proapoptotic gene that is mutated in >50% of colorectal cancers of the microsatellite mutator phenotype. Loss of BAX also renders colorectal cancer cells resistant to TRAIL/Apo2L-mediated radiosensitization. We additionally demonstrate that TRAIL/Apo2L-induced death of p53(+/+)- or p53(-/-)- BAX-proficient but not BAX-deficient colorectal cancer cells is augmented by reducing nuclear factor-kappaB-dependent expression of Bcl-x(L) with either a peptide that disrupts the inhibitor of kappaB kinase complex or the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, sulindac sulfide. These results indicate that the combination of TRAIL/Apo2L with either irradiation or sulindac may be highly effective against both p53-proficient and p53-deficient colorectal cancers; however, BAX-deficient tumors may evade elimination by TRAIL/Apo2L-based regimens. Our findings may aid the development and genotype-specific application of TRAIL/Apo2L-based combinatorial regimens for the treatment of colorectal cancers.
Cancer Res 2002 Mar 15
PMID:Requirement of BAX for TRAIL/Apo2L-induced apoptosis of colorectal cancers: synergism with sulindac-mediated inhibition of Bcl-x(L). 1191 24

Activation of postmitochondrial pathways by UV irradiation was examined using mouse lymphoma 3SB and human leukemic Jurkat cells and two human carcinoma cell lines (HeLa and MCF-7). Exposure of 3SB and Jurkat cells resulted in large amounts of cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) being released into the cytosol, and a clear laddering pattern of DNA fragments was observed within 3 h of incubation after irradiation. Simultaneously, activation of caspase-9 and its downstream caspases was detected. HeLa and MCF-7 cells also showed extensive release of mitochondrial factors and caspase-9 activation at 4 to 6 h after exposure, but apoptotic nuclear changes appeared much later. Compared with 3SB and Jurkat cells, these carcinoma cell lines exhibited reduced activation of caspase-9-like proteolytic activity by UV radiation, and levels of caspase-3-like activity in HeLa cells were extremely low, similar to those in caspase-3-deficient MCF-7 cells. These results suggest that the delayed response to UV-induced nuclear apoptosis in HeLa cells is due to a reduced activation of the caspase cascade downstream of cytochrome c release and suppression of caspase-3 activity.
Jpn J Cancer Res 2002 Mar
PMID:Suppression of postmitochondrial signaling and delayed response to UV-induced nuclear apoptosis in HeLa cells. 1192 9

Anti-angiogenic therapies based on targeted disruption of the tumor microvascular network have been proposed for cancer treatment. Inhibitors of the endothelial cell pro-survival pathway mediated by VEGF were shown to activate caspases and cause microvascular regression, but the efficacy of this strategy can be hindered by the engagement of redundant survival pathways. Alternatively, if direct activation of an apical pro-apoptotic caspase is sufficient to disrupt microvessels in vivo, such a strategy could potentially override upstream endothelial cell survival inputs and disrupt tumor neovascular networks. Here, we fused caspase-9 to a mutated FKBP12 domain to express an inducible caspase-9 molecule (iCaspase-9) that can be activated by a cell-permeable dimerizer drug, and transduced this construct into primary endothelial cells. We found that drug-induced dimerization of iCaspase-9 is sufficient to activate endogenous caspase-3 and trigger apoptosis even when endothelial cells are treated with the pro-survival factors VEGF or bFGF. A single intraperitoneal injection of the dimerizer drug induced apoptosis of endothelial cells expressing iCaspase-9 and elimination of human microvessels engineered in immunodeficient mice. These results demonstrate that the activation of iCaspase-9 disrupts microvessels in vivo, and suggest a novel anti-angiogenic strategy based on the expression and controlled activation of an inducible death gene in neovascular endothelial cells.
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PMID:Ablation of microvessels in vivo upon dimerization of iCaspase-9. 1193 59

Defects in the apoptotic system are likely to play a role in tumorigenesis. Pancreatic carcinoma cells are extremely resistant to apoptosis induction by chemotherapy suggesting that the apoptosis machinery is faulty. We investigated the integrity of the cytochrome c-dependent apoptotic apparatus in 10 human pancreatic carcinoma cell lines. Expression of Apaf-1, caspase-3, -6, -7, -8 and -9, Hsp-70 and XIAP was detected in all cell lines. The expression levels of Apaf-1 and caspase-8 were homogenous in all cell lines whereas differences in expression of other caspases were seen. In cytosolic fractions, all investigated caspases were processed in response to cytochrome c but the extent of processing varied between the cell lines. No stringent correlation between the amount of processing of caspase-9 and effector caspases was seen. Cytochrome c-induced effector caspase activity was quantitated by enzyme assay. Especially at low concentrations of added cytochrome c, this response varied greatly between the cell lines. These data demonstrate that the apoptotic system downstream of the mitochondria is qualitatively intact in pancreatic carcinoma. They further show that the response to cytochrome c can be quantitated in a cell-free system and that determinants other than mere expression of apoptotic molecules can regulate cytochrome c-induced apoptosis.
Br J Cancer 2002 Mar 18
PMID:Analysis of the cytochrome c-dependent apoptosis apparatus in cells from human pancreatic carcinoma. 1195 20

We have analysed the mechanism of action for induction of apoptosis by N-substituted benzamides using declopramide as a lead compound. We show here that declopramide at doses above 250 microM in the mouse 70Z/3 pre-B cell line or in the human promyeolocytic cancer cell line HL60 induced cytochrome c release into the cytosol and caspase-9 activation. The broad spectrum caspase inhibitor zVADfmk and caspase-9 inhibitor zLEDHfmk inhibited apoptosis and improved cell viability when administrated to cells 1 h before exposure to declopramide, whereas the caspase-8 inhibitor zIEDHfmk had less effect. Also, the over expression of Bcl-2 by transfection in 70Z/3 cells inhibited declopramide-induced apoptosis. Prior to the induction of apoptosis, a G(2)/M cell cycle block was induced by declopramide. The cell cycle block was also observed in the presence of broad spectrum caspase inhibitor zVADfmk and in a transfectant expressing high levels of Bcl-2. Furthermore, while p53 was induced in 70Z/3 cells by declopramide, neither the apoptotic mechanism nor the G(2)/M cell cycle block were dependent on p53 activation since both effects were also seen in p53 deficient HL60 cells after addition of declopramide.
Br J Cancer 2002 Mar 18
PMID:Mechanism of action for N-substituted benzamide-induced apoptosis. 1195 31

The ubiquitin-proteasome system is an important regulator of cell growth and apoptosis. The potential of specific proteasome inhibitors to act as novel anti-cancer agents is currently under intensive investigation. Several proteasome inhibitors exert anti-tumour activity in vivo and potently induce apoptosis in tumour cells in vitro, including those resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic agents. By inhibiting NF-kappaB transcriptional activity, proteasome inhibitors may also prevent angiogenesis and metastasis in vivo and further increase the sensitivity of cancer cells to apoptosis. Proteasome inhibitors also exhibit some level of selective cytotoxicity to cancer cells by preferentially inducing apoptosis in proliferating or transformed cells or by overcoming deficiencies in growth-inhibitory or pro-apoptotic molecules. High expression of oncogene products like c-Myc also makes cancer cells more susceptible to proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis. The induction of apoptosis by proteasome inhibitors varies between cell types but often occurs following an initial accumulation of short-lived proteins such as p53, p27, pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members or activation of the stress kinase JNK. These initial events often result in a perturbation of mitochondria with concomitant release of cytochrome c and activation of the Apaf-1 containing apoptosome complex. This results in activation of the apical caspase-9 followed by activation of effector caspases-3 and -7, which are responsible for the biochemical and morphological changes associated with apoptosis.
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PMID:The proteasome: a novel target for cancer chemotherapy. 1196 Mar 20


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