Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.B10 (caspase-7)
896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parkinson disease is the second most frequent neurodegenerative disorder after Alzheimer disease. A subset of genetic forms of Parkinson disease has been attributed to alpha-synuclein, a synaptic protein with remarkable chaperone properties. Synphilin-1 is a cytoplasmic protein that has been identified as a partner of alpha-synuclein (Engelender, S., Kaminsky, Z., Guo, X., Sharp, A. H., Amaravi, R. K., Kleiderlein, J. J., Margolis, R. L., Troncoso, J. C., Lanahan, A. A., Worley, P. F., Dawson, V. L., Dawson, T. M., and Ross, C. A. (1999) Nat. Gen. 22, 110-114), but its function remains totally unknown. We show here for the first time that synphilin-1 displays an antiapoptotic function in the control of cell death. We have established transient and stable transfectants overexpressing wild-type synphilin-1 in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, telecephalon-specific murine 1 neurons, and SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells, and we show that both cell systems display lower responsiveness to staurosporine and 6-hydroxydopamine. Thus, synphilin-1 reduces procaspase-3 hydrolysis and thereby caspase-3 activity and decreases poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage, two main indicators of apoptotic cell death. Furthermore, we establish that synphilin-1 drastically reduces p53 transcriptional activity and expression and lowers p53 promoter transactivation and mRNA levels. Interestingly, we demonstrate that synphilin-1 catabolism is enhanced by staurosporine and blocked by caspase-3 inhibitors. Accordingly, we show by transcription/translation assay that recombinant caspase-3 and, to a lesser extent, caspase-6 but not caspase-7 hydrolyze synphilin-1. Furthermore, we demonstrate that mutated synphilin-1, in which a consensus caspase-3 target sequence has been disrupted, resists proteolysis by cellular and recombinant caspases and displays drastically reduced antiapoptotic phenotype. We further show that the caspase-3-derived C-terminal fragment of synphilin-1 was probably responsible for the antiapoptotic phenotype elicited by the parent wild-type protein. Altogether, our study is the first demonstration that synphilin-1 harbors a protective function that is controlled by the C-terminal fragment generated by its proteolysis by caspase-3.
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PMID:Caspase-3-derived C-terminal product of synphilin-1 displays antiapoptotic function via modulation of the p53-dependent cell death pathway. 1649 29

We evaluated the cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of two purine nucleoside analogues, acyclovir (ACV) and ganciclovir (GCV), on lymphoma cells stably harboring Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV). Colorimetric caspase assay, flow cytometry, and immunoblotting with antibodies against apoptosis-related molecules revealed that GCV has cytotoxic activity toward KSHV-infected primary effusion lymphoma cells, while ACV has weak or little activity. In addition to the GCV-induced cytotoxicity, apoptosis via caspase-7/8, cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and accumulation of p53 and p21 were induced by GCV treatment. In contrast, neither ACV nor GCV have cytotoxicity- or apoptosis-inducing activities toward uninfected cells.
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PMID:Apoptotic effect of ganciclovir on primary effusion lymphoma cells infected with Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus. 1683 51

In contrast to the initial notion that the biological activity of p14(ARF) strictly depends on a functional mdm-2/p53 signaling axis, we recently demonstrated that p14(ARF) mediates apoptosis in a p53/Bax-independent manner. Here, we show that p14(ARF) induces breakdown of the mitochondrial membrane potential and cytochrome c release before triggering caspase-9- and caspase-3/7-like activities in p53/Bax-deficient DU145 prostate cancer cells expressing wild-type Bak. Re-expression of Bax in these cells failed to further enhance p14(ARF)-induced apoptosis, suggesting that p14(ARF)-induced apoptosis primarily depends on Bak but not Bax in these cells. To further define the role of Bak and Bax in p14(ARF)-induced mitochondrial apoptosis, we employed short interference RNA for the knockdown of bak in isogeneic, p53 wild-type HCT116 colon cancer cells either proficient or deficient for Bax. There, combined loss of Bax and Bak attenuated p14(ARF)-induced apoptosis whereas single loss of Bax or Bak was only marginally effective, as in the case of DU145. Notably, HCT116 cells deficient for Bax and Bak failed to release cytochrome c and showed attenuated activation of caspase-9 (LEHDase) and caspase-3/caspase-7 (DEVDase) upon p14(ARF) expression. These data indicate that p14(ARF) triggers apoptosis via a Bax/Bak-dependent pathway in p53-proficient HCT116, whereas Bax is dispensable in p53-deficient DU145 cells. Nevertheless, a substantial proportion of p14(ARF)-induced cell death proceeds in a Bax/Bak-independent manner. This is also the case for inhibition of clonogenic growth that occurs, at least in part, through an entirely Bax/Bak-independent mechanism.
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PMID:Bak functionally complements for loss of Bax during p14ARF-induced mitochondrial apoptosis in human cancer cells. 1684 58

Cisplatin induces renal cell injury and death, resulting in nephrotoxicity that limits its use in cancer therapy. Using cell culture models, recent work has suggested the involvement of p53 in renal cell apoptosis during cisplatin treatment. However, the signals upstream of p53 remain elusive. ATM and ATR are critical regulators of p53 under various conditions of DNA damage. Here, we show that ATM, and not ATR, was proteolytically cleaved into specific fragments of approximately 210 and 150 kDa during cisplatin-induced tubular cell apoptosis. ATM cleavage was paralleled by the development of apoptosis. VAD, a broad-spectrum inhibitor of caspases, attenuated the cleavage of ATM, whereas the inhibitors of specific caspases were less effective. In caspase-3-deficient MCF-7 cells, ATM was cleaved, releasing the 210- but not the 150-kDa fragment. Recombinant caspase-3 was much more effective than caspase-7 in cleaving ATM that was immunoprecipitated from cell lysates. During cisplatin incubation, VAD protected ATM and enhanced p53 phosphorylation. In vitro assay of protein kinase activity further showed that ATM immunoprecipitated from cisplatin-treated cells had significantly lower kinase activity toward p53 than that from control cells. Importantly, the protein kinase activity was restored in ATM that was protected by VAD during cisplatin incubation. ATM deficiency sensitized the cells to cisplatin-induced apoptosis, suggesting a cytoprotective role of ATM in this experimental model. Thus proteolysis of ATM by caspases may inactivate this regulatory molecule to facilitate the progression of apoptosis.
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PMID:Caspase-mediated cleavage of ATM during cisplatin-induced tubular cell apoptosis: inactivation of its kinase activity toward p53. 1684 90

Acrolein, which is a highly reactive alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehyde generated by lipid peroxidation, can affect cells and tissues and cause various disorders. Increased levels of unsaturated aldehydes play an important role in the pathogenesis of a number of human diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, atherosclerosis and diabetes. Acrolein is a highly ubiquitous toxic environmental pollutant. Because of human exposure, there is a need for investigating the mechanisms involved in acrolein toxicity at the cellular and molecular levels. Acrolein can induce cell death by apoptosis, although the mechanisms are not entirely clear. The present study investigates whether mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) play a role in activation of apoptosis by acrolein. Our findings show that acrolein-mediated apoptosis is in fact MAPK-dependent in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The MAP family kinases, including ERK and p38 kinase, and the transcription factor c-Jun were all activated by phosphorylation after 1 h exposure to acrolein. Phosphorylation of ERK and p38 kinases and their blockade by an ERK inhibitor, U0126, or a p38 inhibitor, SB203580, respectively, suggested that activation of apoptosis by acrolein is ERK- and p38-dependent. Thus, blockade of ERK and p38 inhibited chromatin condensation, caspase-7 and -9 activation as well as ICAD cleavage induced by acrolein. JNK and AKT kinases seem to be implicated in survival pathways against acrolein insult, since their respective inhibitors, SP600125 and LY294002/Wortmannin switched the mode of cell death from apoptosis to total necrosis. Finally, acrolein induced phosphorylation of the pro-apoptotic factor p53 which is responsible for transcription of pro-apoptotic factors such as Bax and Fas ligand. These results provide new information demonstrating the implication of MAPKs and AKT in acrolein-induced apoptosis, and this information may be useful for understanding the pathogenesis of a number of tissue diseases and environmental toxicity in response to acrolein.
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PMID:P38 and ERK mitogen-activated protein kinases mediate acrolein-induced apoptosis in Chinese hamster ovary cells. 1719 91

MUC4, a transmembrane mucin, is aberrantly expressed in pancreatic adenocarcinomas while remaining undetectable in the normal pancreas. Recent studies have shown that the expression of MUC4 is associated with the progression of pancreatic cancer and is inversely correlated with the prognosis of pancreatic cancer patients. In the present study, we have examined the phenotypic and molecular consequences of MUC4 silencing with an aim of establishing the mechanistic basis for its observed role in the pathogenesis of pancreatic cancer. The silencing of MUC4 expression was achieved by stable expression of a MUC4-specific short hairpin RNA in CD18/HPAF, a highly metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell line. A significant decrease in MUC4 expression was detected in MUC4-knockdown (CD18/HPAF-siMUC4) cells compared with the parental and scrambled short interfering RNA-transfected (CD18/HPAF-Scr) control cells by immunoblot analysis and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. Consistent with our previous observation, inhibition of MUC4 expression restrained the pancreatic tumor cell growth and metastasis as shown in an orthotopic mouse model. Our in vitro studies revealed that MUC4-associated increase in tumor cell growth resulted from both the enhanced proliferation and reduced cell death. Furthermore, MUC4 expression was also associated with significantly increased invasiveness (P < or = 0.05) and changes in actin organization. The presence of MUC4 on the cell surface was shown to interfere with the tumor cell-extracellular matrix interactions, in part, by inhibiting the integrin-mediated cell adhesion. An altered expression of growth- and metastasis-associated genes (LI-cadherin, CEACAM6, RAC1, AnnexinA1, thrombomodulin, epiregulin, S100A4, TP53, TP53BP, caspase-2, caspase-3, caspase-7, plakoglobin, and neuregulin-2) was also observed as a consequence of the silencing of MUC4. In conclusion, our study provides experimental evidence that supports the functional significance of MUC4 in pancreatic cancer progression and indicates a novel role for MUC4 in cancer cell signaling.
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PMID:MUC4 mucin potentiates pancreatic tumor cell proliferation, survival, and invasive properties and interferes with its interaction to extracellular matrix proteins. 1740 26

Xanthorrhizol is a sesquiterpenoid compound extracted from the rhizome of Curcuma xanthorrhiza. This study investigated the antiproliferative effect and the mechanism of action of xanthorrhizol on human hepatoma cells, HepG2, and the mode of cell death. An antiproliferative assay using methylene blue staining revealed that xanthorrhizol inhibited the proliferation of the HepG2 cells with a 50% inhibition of cell growth (IC50) value of 4.17 +/- 0.053 microg/ml. The antiproliferative activity of xanthorrhizol was due to apoptosis induced in the HepG2 cells and not necrosis, which was confirmed by the Tdt-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay. The xanthorrhizol-treated HepG2 cells showed typical apoptotic morphology such as DNA fragmentation, cell shrinkage and elongated lamellipodia. The apoptosis mediated by xanthorrhizol in the HepG2 cells was associated with the activation of tumor suppressor p53 and down-regulation of antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein expression, but not Bax. The levels of Bcl-2 protein expression decreased 24-h after treatment with xanthorrhizol and remained lower than controls throughout the experiment, resulting in a shift in the Bax to Bcl-2 ratio thus favouring apoptosis. The processing of the initiator procaspase-9 was detected. Caspase-3 was also found to be activated, but not caspase-7. Xanthorrhizol exerts antiproliferative effects on HepG2 cells by inducing apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway.
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PMID:Regulation of p53-, Bcl-2- and caspase-dependent signaling pathway in xanthorrhizol-induced apoptosis of HepG2 hepatoma cells. 1746 28

F16 is a plant-derived pharmacologically active fraction extracted from Eurycoma longifolia Jack. Previously, we have reported that F16 inhibited the proliferation of MCF-7 human breast cancer cells by inducing apoptotic cell death while having some degree of cytoselectivity on a normal human breast cell line, MCF-10A. In this study, we attempted to further elucidate the mode of action of F16. We found that the intrinsic apoptotic pathway was invoked, with the reduction of Bcl-2 protein. Then, executioner caspase-7 was cleaved and activated in response to F16 treatment. Furthermore, apoptosis in the MCF- 7 cells was accompanied by the specific proteolytic cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1). Surprisingly, caspase-9 and p53 were unchanged with F16 treatment. We believe that the F16-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells occurs independently of caspase-9 and p53. Taken together, these results suggest that F16 from E. longifolia exerts anti-proliferative action and growth inhibition on MCF-7 cells through apoptosis induction and that it may have anticancer properties.
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PMID:F16, a fraction from Eurycoma longifolia jack extract, induces apoptosis via a caspase-9-independent manner in MCF-7 cells. 1797 90

This study examined the role of cisplatin-induced p53 activation in regulation of caspases and cellular injury during cisplatin nephrotoxicity. The executioner caspase-6 and -7 but not caspase-3 were identified as transcriptional targets of p53 in cisplatin injury as revealed by chromatin immunoprecipitation, a reporter gene and electrophoretic mobility shift assays, and real-time PCR following overexpression and inhibition of p53. DNA binding by p53 involved the first introns of the human and mouse caspase-7 gene and the mouse caspase-6 gene. Studies in human kidney, breast, ovary, colon, and prostate tumor cell lines also validated these findings. Treatment of p53 (-/-) cells with cisplatin did not induce caspase-6 and -7 expression and subsequent activation. In caspase-3 (-/-) cells, inhibition of caspase-6 and -7 activations markedly prevented cisplatin-induced cell death. In an in vivo model of cisplatin nephrotoxicity inhibition of p53 activation by a p53 inhibitor suppressed transactivation of the caspase-6 and -7 genes and prevented renal failure. p53 (-/-) mice were resistant to cisplatin nephrotoxicity as assessed by renal function and histology. These studies provide first evidence for p53-dependent transcriptional control of the caspase-6 and -7 genes and its functional significance in cisplatin injury to renal cells and functional implication of cisplatin-induced p53 induction in vitro and in vivo in cisplatin nephrotoxicity.
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PMID:Transcriptional activation of caspase-6 and -7 genes by cisplatin-induced p53 and its functional significance in cisplatin nephrotoxicity. 1806 40

We previously identified and characterized a murine BTB domain-containing protein, CIBZ (ZBTB38 in human), that interacts with CtBP and binds to methylated CpGs. However, its physiological function remained unknown. As CtBP is reportedly involved in p53-independent programmed cell death, we examine here whether CIBZ is associated with apoptosis. We found that CIBZ was highly expressed in proliferating C2C12 cells but that its expression levels decreased upon induction of apoptosis by serum starvation. Knockdown of CIBZ by small interfering RNA in C2C12 cells induced apoptosis, as determined by an increase of annexin V/propidium iodide labeling, activation of caspase-3, and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. CIBZ inhibition also activated caspase-7 and caspase-9, suggesting that CIBZ-associated apoptosis occurs through the mitochondrial pathway. Notably, knockdown of CIBZ in p53(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblast cells also activated caspase-3 and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, indicating that CIBZ-associated apoptosis is mediated by a p53-independent pathway; however, because both common and distinct targets are regulated by CIBZ- and CtBP-associated apoptosis, we conclude that more than one pathway is involved. Finally, using mutagenesis and an in vitro caspase cleavage assay, we show that CIBZ is a novel substrate of caspase-3 and identify two caspase-3 recognition sites. These findings indicate, collectively, that CIBZ plays an important role by participating in the negative regulation of apoptosis in murine cells.
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PMID:Down-regulation of CIBZ, a novel substrate of caspase-3, induces apoptosis. 1837 81


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