Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006826 (cancer)
1,092,456 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent studies have demonstrated that Apaf-1 is the adaptor molecule which in the presence of cytosolic cytochrome c (cyt c) and dATP interacts with procaspase-9, resulting in the sequential cleavage and activity of caspase-9 and caspase-3, followed by apoptosis. In the present studies, we determined the effect of enforced overexpression of Apaf-1 on the apoptotic threshold in the human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells. Our findings demonstrate that both transient and stable transfections resulted in a 2.5-fold higher expression of Apaf-1, which was associated with approximately a 5-fold increase in the percentage of apoptosis in the transfectants (HL-60/Apaf-1) as compared with the control HL-60/neo cells. In cells overexpressing either Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL, transient overexpression of Apaf-1 did not induce apoptosis. Stably overexpressing Apaf-1 levels significantly sensitized HL-60/Apaf-1 cells to apoptosis induced by clinically achievable concentrations of paclitaxel or etoposide (P < 0.01). This increase in paclitaxel- or etoposide-induced apoptosis of HL-60/Apaf-1 cells was not associated with any significant alterations in Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, Bax, Fas, or Fas ligand expression. It was, however, clearly associated with caspase-9 cleavage, as well as the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and DFF45 cleavage activity of caspase-3. Coexpression of the catalytically inactive, dominant-negative, mutant caspase-9, XIAP, or treatment with the caspase inhibitor, zVAD, significantly inhibited the increase in apoptosis of HL-60/Apaf-1 cells (P < 0.01). These data indicate that the intracellular levels of Apaf-1 is an important molecular determinant of the threshold for apoptosis induced by paclitaxel and etoposide.
Cancer Res 1998 Oct 15
PMID:Overexpression of Apaf-1 promotes apoptosis of untreated and paclitaxel- or etoposide-treated HL-60 cells. 978 1

Alternatively spliced isoforms of certain apoptosis regulators, such as Bcl-x, Ced-4, and Ich-1, have been shown to play opposing roles in regulating apoptosis. Here, we describe the identification of an endogenous alternatively spliced isoform of caspase-9, named caspase-9b, which lacks the central large subunit caspase domain. Caspase-9b is detectable in many cell lines by PCR and at the mRNA and protein levels. Caspase-9b can interact with the caspase recruitment domain of Apaf-1, and like the active site mutant of caspase-9, it can inhibit multiple forms of apoptosis, including those triggered by oligomerization of death receptors. It can also block activation of caspase-9 and -3 by Apaf-1 in an in vitro cytochrome c-dependent caspase activation assay. These results suggest that caspase-9b functions as an endogenous apoptosis inhibitory molecule by interfering with the formation of a functional Apaf-1-caspase-9 complex.
Cancer Res 1999 Mar 01
PMID:Identification of an endogenous dominant-negative short isoform of caspase-9 that can regulate apoptosis. 1007 Sep 54

Apoptosis is a genetically programmed cell death that is required for morphogenesis during embryogenic development and for tissue homeostasis in adult organisms. In most cases, apoptosis involves cytochrome c release from mitochondria. In the cytosol, cytochrome c combines with APAF-1 in the presence of ATP to activate caspase-9 that, in turn, activates effectors caspases such as caspase-3. Bcl-2 and related proteins control cytochrome c release from the mitochondria whereas IAP (for Inhibitor of APoptosis) molecules modulate the activity of caspases. Plasma membrane receptors such as Fas (CD95, APO-1), characterized by a so-called "death domain" in their cytoplasmic domain, can activate the caspase cascade through adaptator molecules such as FADD (Fas-Associated protein with a Death Domain). Dysregulation of the apoptotic machinery plays a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases and molecules involved in cell death pathways are potential therapeutic targets in immunologic, neurologic, cancer, infectious and inflammatory diseases.
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PMID:[Apoptosis: molecular mechanisms]. 1010 3

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.
Cancer Res 1999 May 01
PMID:Mistletoe lectin activates caspase-8/FLICE independently of death receptor signaling and enhances anticancer drug-induced apoptosis. 1023 92

We have assessed in detail the effect of cisplatin-activated programmed cell death in the cisplatin-sensitive human ovarian cancer cell line A2780 and two drug-resistant subclones, CP70 and C30. To determine whether the differential extent of apoptosis observed between the sensitive and resistant ovarian cancer cell lines was the result of dissimilar upstream signaling events, we assessed the execution of apoptotic events that precede target protein proteolysis and subsequent chromosomal DNA degradation. Proteolytic degradation of procaspase-3 was observed in both the CP70 and C30 cells following IC50 cisplatin treatment, whereas no proteolyzed caspase-3 subunits were detected in the A2780 cells. However, using a direct enzymatic assay measuring cleavage of the synthetic peptide substrate (N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-p-nitroanilide), activity was detected in extracts prepared from A2780 cells treated at the IC90 level of cisplatin and was 2-3-fold less than that of extracts prepared from CP70 and C30 cells. Because the activation of procaspase-3 by caspase-9 requires the release of cytochrome c into the cytoplasm, we determined the level of cytoplasmic cytochrome c in each cell line in response to cisplatin treatment. Consistent with the caspase-3 activation data, a very small increase in cytoplasmic cytochrome c was observed in A2780 cells following cisplatin treatment, whereas dramatic increases were evident in both the CP70 and C30 cell lines. The expression of the mitochondrial factors Bcl-2, Bcl-x, and Bax was determined because each has been implicated in the regulation or release of cytochrome c at the level of the mitochondria. Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL proteins remained relatively unchanged in expression for over 48 h after exposure to cisplatin in the A2780 cell lines. However, within the same time period, expression of Bcl-2 decreased in the CP70- and C30-resistant cell lines, whereas an increase in Bcl-xL expression was observed. Expression of the proapoptotic Bcl-xS protein was observed in only the resistant CP70 and C30 cell lines independent of cisplatin treatment. A change in the expression of Mr 24,000 Bax to a Mr 21,000 isoform was evidenced in the A2780 cells within 48 h of cisplatin treatment and, to a greater extent, in the CP70 and C30 cells, which also expressed a Mr 16,000 Bax variant. Evidence for an alternative apoptotic pathway in A2780 cells was obtained by demonstrating increased FADD expression in response to cisplatin treatment. These results support a model in which cisplatin-induced programmed cell death in the cisplatin-sensitive A2780 and -resistant CP70 and C30 cells proceeds via caspase-3-independent and -dependent pathways, respectively.
Cancer Res 1999 Jul 01
PMID:Cisplatin-induced apoptosis proceeds by caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways in cisplatin-resistant and -sensitive human ovarian cancer cell lines. 1039 48

The tyrphostin AG957 (NSC 654705) inhibits p210bcr/abl, the transforming kinase responsible for most cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). The present studies were performed to determine the fate of AG957-treated cells and assess the selectivity of AG957 for CML myeloid progenitors. When K562 cells (derived from a patient with blast crisis CML) were treated with AG957, dose- and time-dependent p210bc/abl down-regulation was followed by mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3, and apoptotic morphological changes. These apoptotic changes were inhibited by transfection with cDNA encoding dominant negative caspase-9 but not dominant-negative FADD or blocking anti-Fas antibodies. In additional experiments, a 24-h AG957 exposure caused dose-dependent inhibition of K562 colony formation in soft agar. To extend these studies to clinical samples of CML, peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 10 chronic phase CML patients and normal controls were assayed for the growth of hematopoietic colonies in vitro in the presence of increasing concentrations of AG957. These assays demonstrated selectivity of AG957 for CML progenitors, with median IC50s (CML versus normal) of 7.3 versus >20 microM AG957 in granulocyte colony-forming cells (P < 0.001), 5.3 versus >20 microM in granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming cells (P < 0.05), and 15.5 versus > 20 microM in erythroid colony-forming cells (P > 0.05). The adamantyl ester of AG957 (NSC 680410) down-regulated p210bcr/abl in K562 cells and inhibited granulocyte colony formation in CML specimens at lower concentrations without enhanced toxicity in normal progenitors. These observations not only demonstrate that AG957-induced p210bcr/abl down-regulation is followed by activation of the cytochrome c/Apaf-1/caspase-9 pathway but also indicate that this class of kinase inhibitor exhibits selectivity worthy of further evaluation.
Clin Cancer Res 2000 Jan
PMID:Effects of the bcr/abl kinase inhibitors AG957 and NSC 680410 on chronic myelogenous leukemia cells in vitro. 1065 55

Ectopic overexpression of Apaf-1 (2.5-fold) in human acute myelogenous leukemia HL-60 cells (HL-60/Apaf-1 cells) induced apoptosis and sensitized HL-60/Apaf-1 cells to etoposide- and paclitaxel-induced apoptosis (C. Perkins et al., Cancer Res., 58: 4561-4566, 1998). In this report, we demonstrate that in HL-60/Apaf-1 cells, the activity of caspase-9 and -3 induced by Apaf-1 overexpression was associated with a significant increase (5-fold) in the cytosolic accumulation of cytochrome c (cyt c), loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsim), and an increase in the reactive oxygen species. These were also associated with the processing of procaspase-8 and Bid (cytosolic, proapoptotic BH3 domain containing protein). Transient transfection of Apaf-1 into the Apaf-1-containing mouse embryogenic fibroblasts (MEFs; Apaf-1+/- MEFs) or Apaf-1-/- MEFs also induced the processing of procaspase-9 and procaspase-8, Bid cleavage, and apoptosis. These events were secondary to the activity of the downstream caspases induced by Apaf-1. This conclusion is supported by the observation that in HL-60/Apaf-1 cells, ectopic expression of dominant negative caspase-9, its inhibitory short isoform caspase-9b, or XIAP or treatment with the caspase inhibitor zVAD (50 microM) inhibited Apaf-1-induced caspase-8 and Bid cleavage, mitochondrial deltapsim, release of cyt c, and apoptosis. In contrast, a transient transfection of dominant negative caspase-8 or CrmA or exposure to caspase-8 inhibitor zIETD-fmk inhibited the processing of procaspase-8 and Bid but did not inhibit the cytosolic accumulation of cyt c in either the untreated HL-60/Apaf-1 cells or the etoposide-treated HL-60/Apaf-1 and HL-60/neo cells. These results indicate that Apaf-1 overexpression lowers the apoptotic threshold by activating caspase-9 and caspase-3. This triggers the mitochondrial deltapsim and cyt c release into the cytosol through a predominant mechanism other than cleavage of caspase-8 and/or Bid. This mechanism may involve a cytosolic mitochondrial permeability transition factor, which may be processed and activated by the downstream effector caspases, thereby completing an amplifying feedback loop, which triggers the mitochondrial events during apoptosis.
Cancer Res 2000 Mar 15
PMID:The role of Apaf-1, caspase-9, and bid proteins in etoposide- or paclitaxel-induced mitochondrial events during apoptosis. 1074 35

Apoptosis inhibition rather than enhanced cellular proliferation occurs in prostate cancer (CaP), the most commonly diagnosed malignancy in American men. Therefore, it is important to characterize residual apoptotic pathways in CaP cells. When intracellular Ca(2+) stores are released and plasma membrane "store-operated" Ca(2+) entry channels subsequently open, cytosolic [Ca(2+)] increases and is thought to induce apoptosis. However, cells incapable of releasing Ca(2+) stores are resistant to apoptotic stimuli, indicating that Ca(2+) store release is also important. We investigated whether release of intracellular Ca(2+) stores is sufficient to induce apoptosis of the CaP cell line LNCaP. We developed a method to release stored Ca(2+) without elevating cytosolic [Ca(2+)]; this stimulus induced LNCaP cell apoptosis. We compared the apoptotic pathways activated by intracellular Ca(2+) store release with the dual insults of store release and cytosolic [Ca(2+)] elevation. Earlier processing of caspases-3 and -7 occurred when intracellular store release was the sole Ca(2+) perturbation. Apoptosis was attenuated in both conditions in stable transfected cells expressing antiapoptotic proteins Bclx(L) and catalytically inactive caspase-9, and in both scenarios inactive caspase-9 became complexed with caspase-7. Thus, intracellular Ca(2+) store release initiates an apoptotic pathway similar to that elicited by the dual stimuli of cytosolic [Ca(2+)] elevation and intracellular store release.
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PMID:Characterization of calcium release-activated apoptosis of LNCaP prostate cancer cells. 1075 65

Cytotoxic endoribonucleases (RNases) possess a potential for use in cancer therapy. However, the molecular determinants of RNase-induced cell death are not well understood. In this work, we identify such determinants of the cytotoxicity induced by onconase, an amphibian cytotoxic RNase. Onconase displayed a remarkable specificity for tRNA in vivo, leaving rRNA and mRNA apparently undamaged. Onconase-treated cells displayed apoptosis-associated cell blebbing, nuclear pyknosis and fragmentation (karyorrhexis), DNA fragmentation, and activation of caspase-3-like activity. The cytotoxic action of onconase correlated with inhibition of protein synthesis; however, we present evidence for the existence of a mechanism of onconase-induced apoptosis that is independent of inhibition of protein synthesis. The caspase inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe) fluoromethyl ketone (zVADfmk), at concentrations that completely prevent apoptosis and caspase activation induced by ligation of the death receptor Fas, had only a partial protective effect on onconase-induced cell death. The proapoptotic activity of the p53 tumor suppressor protein and the Fas ligand/Fas/Fas-associating protein with death domain (FADD)/caspase-8 proapoptotic cascade were not required for onconase-induced apoptosis. Procaspases-9, -3, and -7 were processed in onconase-treated cells, suggesting the involvement of the mitochondrial apoptotic machinery in onconase-induced apoptosis. However, the onconase-induced activation of the caspase-9/caspase-3 cascade correlated with atypically little release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. In turn, the low levels of cytochrome c released from mitochondria correlated with a lack of detectable translocation of proapoptotic Bax from the cytosol onto mitochondria in response to onconase. This suggests the possibility of involvement of a different, potentially Bax- and cytochrome c-independent mechanism of caspase-9 activation in onconase-treated cells. As one possible mechanism, we demonstrate that procaspase-9 is released from mitochondria in onconase-treated cells. A detailed understanding of the molecular determinants of the cytotoxic action of onconase could provide means of positive or negative therapeutic modulation of the activity of this potent anticancer agent.
Cancer Res 2000 Apr 01
PMID:Molecular determinants of apoptosis induced by the cytotoxic ribonuclease onconase: evidence for cytotoxic mechanisms different from inhibition of protein synthesis. 1076 89

We have shown previously that the pathways leading to Fas-mediated apoptosis in prostatic carcinoma cell lines are intact, because apoptosis can be triggered either by Fas ligation alone in the Fas-sensitive cell lines PC3 and ALVA31 or by rendering the Fas-resistant cell lines DU145 and JCA1 Fas-sensitive by combined treatment with anti-Fas monoclonal antibody and cycloheximide (O. W. Rokhlin et al., Cancer Res., 57: 1758-1768, 1997). In this study, we demonstrate that two of the early events after Fas ligation are the release of cytochrome c from the mitochondria and activation of caspase-9. We also found that Bid is processed after Fas ligation and thus might activate the mitochondria-dependent apoptotic cascade. In a cell-free system, cytochrome c induced caspase-3-like activity in cytoplasmic extracts from all four cell lines studied, although differences in the level of enzymatic activity were observed. Western blot analysis revealed that caspase-7 is activated by cytochrome c at the same level in all extracts, whereas expression and activation of caspase-3 varied considerably. Cytochrome c-activated extracts displayed different abilities in the induction of apoptotic features in isolated nuclei such as morphological changes and DNA fragmentation. However, differences in nuclear apoptotic activity induced by cytochrome c did not correlate with the level of caspase-3 like activity in the different extracts. These results suggest that the mitochondrial pathway is involved in Fas-mediated apoptosis in prostatic carcinoma cell lines and that, in addition to caspase-7 and caspase-3, there are other factors that confer nuclear apoptotic activity.
Cancer Res 2000 Apr 15
PMID:Cytochrome c is involved in Fas-mediated apoptosis of prostatic carcinoma cell lines. 1078 80


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