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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of NF-kappa B in regulating FasL-mediated cytotoxicity was investigated by using lactacystin. Lactacystin is a microbial metabolite known to inhibit only the protease activity of the
proteasome
, which is required for NF-kappa B translocation. When activated by immobilized anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody, hybridoma T cells (5D5) degraded I kappa B beta, translocated NF-kappa B into the nucleus, transcribed immediate-early genes and the Fas ligand (FasL) gene, and expressed FasL-mediated cytotoxicity. Lactacystin strongly blocked I kappa B beta degradation and the translocation of NF-kappa B (p50/RelA heterodimer), but had little effect on the expression of the transcription factors, Oct-1 and AP-1. Moreover, lactacystin did not inhibit the nuclear translocation of NF-ATp whereas cyclosporin A inhibited the translocation of both NF-kappa B and NF-ATp. The expression of c-myc and nur77, two immediate-early genes implicated in FasL gene activation, was blocked by lactacystin. Subsequently, the expression of FasL gene and FasL-mediated cytotoxicity was inhibited. LLnL, a well-known peptide
aldehyde
which inhibits the protease activities of the
proteasome
and cysteine proteases, also inhibited NF-kappa B translocation and FasL-mediated cytotoxicity. However, these events were not inhibited by the highly specific cysteine protease inhibitor E64. These observations provide further evidence that FasL cytotoxicity is regulated by the
proteasome
. Furthermore, lactacystin must be added early in order to efficiently inhibit the induction of FasL cytotoxicity, indicating that the early events are critical for FasL gene activation. Our study integrates the
proteasome
-dependent I kappa B degradation and NF-kappa B translocation into a T cell activation cascade which results in FasL gene activation and the expression of FasL-mediated cytotoxicity.
...
PMID:Proteasome regulation of Fas ligand cytotoxicity. 934 69
Cell-permeant peptidyl aldehydes and diazomethylketones are frequently utilized as inhibitors of regulatory intracellular proteases. In the present study the specificities of several peptidyl inhibitors for purified human mu-calpain and 20 S
proteasome
were investigated. Acetyl-LLnL
aldehyde
, acetyl-LLM
aldehyde
, carbobenzyloxy-LLnV
aldehyde
(ZLLnVal), and carbobenzyloxy-LLY-diazomethyl ketone produced half-maximum inhibition of the caseinolytic activity of mu-calpain at concentrations of 1-5 x 10(-7) M. In contrast, only ZLLnVal was a reasonably potent inhibitor of the caseinolytic activity of 20 S
proteasome
, producing 50% inhibition at 10(-5) M. The other inhibitors were at least 10-fold less potent, producing substantial inhibition only at near saturating concentrations in the assay buffer. Further studies with ZLLnVal demonstrated that its inhibition of the
proteasome
was independent of casein concentration over a 25-fold range. Proteolysis of calpastatin or lysozyme by the
proteasome
was half-maximally inhibited by 4 and 22 microM ZLLnVal, respectively. Thus, while other studies have shown that ZLLnVal is a potent inhibitor of the hydrophobic peptidase activity of the
proteasome
, it appears to be a much weaker inhibitor of its proteinase activity. The ability of the cell permeant peptidyl inhibitors to inhibit growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied because this organism expresses
proteasome
but not calpains. Concentrations of ZLLnVal as high as 200 microM had no detectable effect on growth rates of overnight cultures. However, yeast cell lysates prepared from these cultures contained 2 microM ZLLnVal, an amount which should have been sufficient to fully inhibit hydrophobic peptidase activity of yeast
proteasome
. Degradation of ubiquitinylated proteins in yeast extracts by endogenous
proteasome
was likewise sensitive only to high concentrations of ZLLnVal. The higher sensitivity of the proteinase activity of calpains to inhibition by the cell permeant inhibitors suggests that calpain-like activities may be targets of these inhibitors in animal cells.
...
PMID:Specificities of cell permeant peptidyl inhibitors for the proteinase activities of mu-calpain and the 20 S proteasome. 936 65
Inhibition of the major cytosolic protease,
proteasome
, has been reported to induce programmed cell death in several cell lines, while with other lines, similar inhibition blocked apoptosis triggered by a variety of harmful treatments. To elucidate the mechanism of pro- and antiapoptotic action of
proteasome
inhibitors, their effects on U937 lymphoid and 293 kidney human tumor cells were tested. Treatment with peptidyl
aldehyde
MG132 and other
proteasome
inhibitors led to a steady increase in activity of c-Jun N-terminal kinase, JNK1, which is known to initiate the apoptotic program in response to certain stresses. Dose dependence of MG132-induced JNK activation was parallel with that of apoptosis. Furthermore, inhibition of the JNK signaling pathway strongly suppressed MG132-induced apoptosis. These data indicate that JNK is critical for the cell death caused by
proteasome
inhibitors. An antiapoptotic action of
proteasome
inhibitors could be revealed by a short incubation of cells with MG132 followed by its withdrawal. Under these conditions, the major heat shock protein Hsp72 accumulated in cells and caused suppression of JNK activation in response to certain stresses. Accordingly, pretreatment with MG132 reduced JNK-dependent apoptosis caused by heat shock or ethanol, but it was unable to block JNK-independent apoptosis induced by TNFalpha. Therefore,
proteasome
inhibitors activate JNK, which initiates an apoptotic program, and simultaneously they induce Hsp72, which suppresses JNK-dependent apoptosis. A balance between these two effects might define the fate of cells exposed to the inhibitors.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibitors activate stress kinases and induce Hsp72. Diverse effects on apoptosis. 949 67
Interaction of many infectious agents with eukaryotic host cells is known to cause activation of the ubiquitous transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) (U. Siebenlist, G. Franzoso, and K. Brown, Annu. Rev. Cell Biol. 10:405-455, 1994). Recently, we reported a biphasic pattern of NF-kappaB activation in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells consequent to infection with Rickettsia rickettsii, an obligate intracellular gram-negative bacterium and the etiologic agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever (L. A. Sporn, S. K. Sahni, N. B. Lerner, V. J. Marder, D. J. Silverman, L. C. Turpin, and A. L. Schwab, Infect. Immun. 65:2786-2791, 1997). In the present study, we describe activation of NF-kappaB in a cell-free system, accomplished by addition of partially purified R. rickettsii to endothelial cell cytoplasmic extracts. This activation was rapid, reaching maximal levels at 60 min, and was dependent on the number of R. rickettsii organisms added. Antibody supershift assays using monospecific antisera against NF-kappaB subunits (p50 and p65) confirmed the authenticity of the gel-shifted complexes and identified both p50-p50 homodimers and p50-p65 heterodimers as constituents of the activated NF-kappaB pool. Activation occurred independently of the presence of endothelial cell membranes and was not inhibited by removal of the endothelial cell
proteasome
. Lack of involvement of the
proteasome
was further confirmed in assays using the peptide-
aldehyde
proteasome inhibitor MG 132. Activation was not ATP dependent since no change in activation resulted from addition of an excess of the unhydrolyzable ATP analog ATPgammaS, supplementation with exogenous ATP, or hydrolysis of endogenous ATP with ATPase. Furthermore, Western blot analysis before and after in vitro activation failed to demonstrate phosphorylation of serine 32 or degradation of the cytoplasmic pool of IkappaB alpha. This lack of IkappaB alpha involvement was supported by the finding that R. rickettsii can induce NF-kappaB activation in cytoplasmic extracts prepared from T24 bladder carcinoma cells and human embryo fibroblasts stably transfected with a superrepressor phosphorylation mutant of IkappaB alpha, rendering NF-kappaB inactivatable by many known signals. Thus, evidence is provided for a potentially novel NF-kappaB activation pathway wherein R. rickettsii may interact with and activate host cell transcriptional machinery independently of the involvement of the
proteasome
or known signal transduction pathways.
...
PMID:Proteasome-independent activation of nuclear factor kappaB in cytoplasmic extracts from human endothelial cells by Rickettsia rickettsii. 957 57
Recent investigations have indicated the involvement of
proteasome
in programmed cell death. The present studies show that although peptide
aldehyde
inhibitors of
proteasome
are by themselves weak inducers of apoptosis, they inhibit the apoptotic effect of the anticancer drug etoposide in rat thymocytes. Acetyl-Leu-Leu-norvalinal (LLnV-al) and other related peptide aldehydes inhibited the increase in caspase activity and DNA fragmentation that followed treatment with etoposide and their effect was related to their potency as
proteasome
inhibitors. To inhibit etoposide-induced apoptosis, LLnV-al must be present within 3 h of treatment with etoposide, in the same way as the inhibitor of protein synthesis cycloheximide must be. Etoposide caused a rapid accumulation of p53 protein that was not inhibited by LLnV-al, which was also a strong inducer of p53. Peptide aldehydes were also weak activators of caspase activity, suggesting that the same mechanism, i.e. the blocking of
proteasome
function, both triggers apoptosis and inhibits the effect of etoposide. These results are consistent with a model in which
proteasome
is selectively involved in the pathway used by etoposide to induce cell suicide.
...
PMID:Inhibition of etoposide-induced apoptosis with peptide aldehyde inhibitors of proteasome. 962 Aug 67
Proteasomes have been implicated in the production of the majority of peptides that associate with MHC class I molecules. We used two different
proteasome
inhibitors, the peptide
aldehyde
N-acetyl-L-leucyl-L-leucyl-L-norleucinal (LLnL) and the highly specific inhibitor lactacystin, to examine the role of proteasomes in generating peptide epitopes associated with HLA-A*0201. Neither LLnL nor lactacystin was able to completely block the expression of the HLA-A*0201. Furthermore, the effects of LLnL and lactacystin on the expression of different categories of specific epitopes, TAP independent vs TAP dependent and derived from either cytosolic or membrane proteins, were assessed. As predicted, presentation of two TAP-dependent epitopes was blocked by LLnL and lactacystin, while a TAP-independent epitope that is processed in the endoplasmic reticulum was unaffected by either inhibitor. Surprisingly, both LLnL and lactacystin increased rather than inhibited the expression of a cytosolically transcribed and TAP-dependent peptide from the influenza A virus M1 protein. Mass spectrometric analyses of in vitro
proteasome
digests of a synthetic 24 mer containing this epitope revealed no digestion products of any length that included the intact epitope. Instead, the major species resulted from cleavage sites within the epitope. Although cleavage at these sites was inhibitable by LLnL and lactacystin, epitope-containing species were still not produced. We conclude that proteasomes may in some cases actually destroy epitopes that would otherwise be destined for presentation by class I molecules. These results suggest that some epitopes are generated by nonproteasomal proteases in the cytosol.
...
PMID:Proteasomes can either generate or destroy MHC class I epitopes: evidence for nonproteasomal epitope generation in the cytosol. 964 14
We investigated whether proteasomes were involved in the invasiveness of oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cells. The migration of SCC cells through a gelatin-coated membrane was enhanced with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), which was strongly inhibited by a peptide
aldehyde
, N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-norleucinal (ALLN), but not by its structurally related compound, N-acetyl-Leu-Leu-methioninal (ALLM). Since ALLN is a more potent inhibitor against proteasomal proteolysis than ALLM, cell migration inhibited by ALLN may thus likely depend on proteasomes. The TNF alpha-induced migration through gelatin appeared to be associated with the gelatinolytic activity from the cells, since TNF alpha strongly enhanced the production of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9/gelatinase B in the SCC cells, as detected by gelatin zymography. The production of MMP-9 was also inhibited by pretreatment with ALLN, but not ALLM, in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, ALLN could block the activation and nuclear translocation of a transcription-activating factor, NF-kappaB, which is known to regulate MMP-9 expression in TNF alpha-stimulated SCC cells. The TNF alpha-induced degradation of IkappaB alpha was also suppressed by ALLN treatment, thus implying that the molecule linking
proteasome
to MMP-9 production should be IkappaB alpha. We finally reconfirmed the involvement of proteasomes in the invasive behavior of oral SCC using lactacystin, a specific proteasome inhibitor, which could prevent TNF alpha from enhancing MMP-9 production, NF-kappaB activation, induction of MMP-9 mRNA and cell migration.
...
PMID:Involvement of proteasomes in migration and matrix metalloproteinase-9 production of oral squamous cell carcinoma. 967 62
In proliferating cells the turnover rate of proteins responsible for regulation of the cell cycle progression, namely cyclins and inhibitors of the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and phosphatases, is rapid and their cellular level is modulated at the transcriptional, translational and/or degradation (via
proteasome
pathway) stages. Inhibition of
proteasome
function results in accumulation of rapidly turning over proteins and, thus, causes an imbalance of the cell cycle regulatory components, and loss of their regulatory function. Indeed, it has been shown that
proteasome
inhibitors perturb the cell cycle progression. Onconase, a novel RNase which has anti-tumor activity and is in clinical trials, has previously been shown to suppress protein synthesis, presumably by degradation of intracellular RNA, preferentially tRNA. By interfering with regulation of expression of cyclins and/or CDK-inhibitors, onconase also may induce the imbalance of these proteins and potentiate the effect of
proteasome
inhibitors. In the present study, we observed that the combinations of onconase with peptide-
aldehyde
inhibitors of calpain and
proteasome
such as the N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-norleucinal (LLnL) and the N-acetyl-leucinyl-valinyl-phenylalaninal (LVP), but not N-acetyl-leucinyl-leucinyl-methioninal (LLM), were synergistic in suppressing cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis in three human tumor cell lines: A-549 lung adenocarcinoma, DU-145 prostatic carcinoma, and MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma. The observed cytotoxicity may also be a result of prevention of the induction of the 'survival' genes by the nuclear factor kappaB (NFkappaB) by onconase and
proteasome
inhibitors. The data indicate that such combinations should be further tested as potential anti-cancer regimens.
...
PMID:Enhanced in vitro cytotoxicity and cytostasis of the combination of onconase with a proteasome inhibitor. 973 89
20S proteasomes were purified from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) and shown to be built from one alpha-type subunit (PrcA) and one beta-type subunit (PrcB). The enzyme displayed chymotrypsin-like activity on synthetic substrates and was sensitive to peptide
aldehyde
and peptide vinyl sulfone inhibitors and to the Streptomyces metabolite lactacystin. Characterization of the structural genes revealed an operon-like gene organization (prcBA) similar to Rhodococcus and Mycobacterium spp. and showed that the beta subunit is encoded with a 53-amino-acid propeptide which is removed during
proteasome
assembly. The upstream DNA region contains the conserved orf7 and an AAA ATPase gene (arc).
...
PMID:The 20S proteasome of Streptomyces coelicolor. 976 79
Cell growth and viability are dependent on the function of the
multicatalytic proteinase
complex (proteasome), a multisubunit particle that affects progression through the mitotic cycle by degradation of cyclins. Exposure of rodent fibroblasts and human lymphoblasts in culture to benzyloxycarbonyl-leucyl-leucyl-phenylalaninal (Z-LLF-CHO), a cell-permeable peptidyl
aldehyde
inhibitor of the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome, resulted in the induction of apoptosis in a rapid, dose-dependent fashion. Fibroblasts transformed with ras and myc, lymphoblasts transformed by c-myc alone, and a Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) cell line that overexpresses c-Myc were up to 40-fold more susceptible to apoptosis than were either primary rodent fibroblasts or immortalized nontransformed human lymphoblasts, respectively. To determine whether such preferential apoptosis could impact upon tumor growth in vivo, toxicological studies were performed in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency and showed that mice tolerated single interscapular doses of Z-LLF-CHO without unacceptable toxicity. Severe combined immunodeficient mice bearing s.c. BL tumors in the flank were treated interscapularly with Z-LLF-CHO or a comparable dose of the peptidyl alcohol (Z-LLF-OH), which does not induce proteasome inhibition or apoptosis. Single doses of Z-LLF-CHO induced statistically significant (P < 0.0001) early tumor regression and a significant (P < 0.0001) delay in tumor progression. Analysis of tumor specimens revealed increased apoptosis in BL tumors from mice treated with Z-LLF-CHO. These results, showing a 42% tumor growth delay, indicate that proteasome inhibitors have the potential of curbing the growth of a c-myc-related tumor.
...
PMID:Tumor growth inhibition induced in a murine model of human Burkitt's lymphoma by a proteasome inhibitor. 976 62
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