Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The degradation of alphaII- and betaII-spectrin during apoptosis in cultured human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells was investigated. Immunofluorescent staining showed that the collapse of the cortical spectrin cytoskeleton is an early event following staurosporine challenge. This collapse correlated with the generation of a series of prominent spectrin breakdown products (BDPs) derived from both alphaII- and betaII-subunits. Major C-terminal alphaII-spectrin BDPs were detected at approximately 150, 145, and 120 kDa (alphaII-BDP150, alphaII-BDP145, and alphaII-BDP120, respectively); major C-terminal betaII-spectrin BDPs were at approximately 110 and 85 kDa (betaII-BDP110 and betaII-BDP85, respectively). N-terminal sequencing of the major fragments produced in vitro by caspase 3 revealed that alphaII-BDP150 and alphaII-BDP120 were generated by cleavages at DETD1185*S1186 and DSLD1478*S1479, respectively. For betaII-spectrin, a major caspase site was detected at DEVD1457*S1458, and both betaII-BDP110 and betaII-BDP85 shared a common N-terminal sequence starting with Ser1458. An additional cleavage site near the C terminus, at ETVD2146*S2147, was found to account for betaII-BDP85. Studies using specific caspase or calpain inhibitors indicate that the pattern of spectrin breakdown during apoptosis differs from that during non-apoptotic cell death. We postulate that in concert with calpain, caspase rapidly targets critical sites in both alphaII- and betaII-spectrin and thereby initiates a rapid dissolution of the spectrin-actin cortical cytoskeleton with apoptosis.
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PMID:Simultaneous degradation of alphaII- and betaII-spectrin by caspase 3 (CPP32) in apoptotic cells. 971 74

DAN gene was first isolated by differential screening between rat 3Y1 and v-src-transformed 3Y1 cells and showed a tumor-suppressive activity toward v-src-transformed 3Y1 cells. When DAN-transfected neuroblastoma cells were treated with a tumor promoter phorbol ester, TPA, neurite-like processes appeared within 2 h whereas no apparent change was observed in the parent and vector-transfected cells up to 8 h. This suggests some difference in TPA-receptor, protein kinase C (PKC), between DAN-transfectants and the control cells. DAN-transfected SH-SY5Y cells showed complete loss in PKCalpha and a large decrease in PKCgamma. Similar down-regulation in PKCalpha and PKCgamma was also observed in DAN-transfected Ha-ras-transformed NIH 3T3 cells. The decreased level of PKCalpha was partially recovered after treatment with a calpain inhibitor, ZLLH. A 150-kDa proteolytic product of a calpain-specific substrate, non-erythroid alpha-spectrin, was detectable in DAN-transfected SH-SY5Y cells but not in the parent or vector-transfected control cells. This suggests that DAN-transfected cells contain activated calpain which may cause down-regulation of PKC and hence induce the altered TPA response.
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PMID:Down-regulation of protein kinase C alpha and gamma and enhanced TPA-induced neurite formation in DAN-transfected neuroblastoma cells. 986 17

The role of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis in mechanisms of neuronal cell death and cysteine protease activation was investigated in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. Cells were incubated in 2 mM EGTA to lower intracellular Ca2+ or 5 mM CaCl2 to raise it. Cell death and activation of calpain and caspase-3 were measured. Both EGTA and excess CaCl2 elicited cell death. EGTA induced DNA laddering and an increase in caspase-3-like, but not calpain, activity. Pan-caspase inhibitors protected against EGTA-, but not CaCl2-, induced cell death. Conversely, excess Ca2+ elicited necrosis and activated calpain but not caspase-3. Calpain inhibitors did not preserve cell viability. Ca2+ was the death-mediating factor, because restoration of extracellular Ca2+ protected against cell death induced by EGTA and blockade of Ca2+ channels by Ni2+ protected against that induced by high Ca2+. We conclude that the EGTA treatment lowered intracellular Ca2+ and elicited caspase-3-like protease activity, which led to apoptosis. Conversely, excess extracellular Ca2+ entered Ca2+ channels and increased intracellular Ca2+ leading to calpain activation and necrosis. The mode of cell death and protease activation in response to changing Ca2+ were selective and mutually exclusive, demonstrating that these are useful models to individually investigate apoptosis and necrosis.
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PMID:Alterations of extracellular calcium elicit selective modes of cell death and protease activation in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. 1021 61

Localization of the two main components of the Ca(2+)-dependent proteolytic system has been investigated in human neuroblastoma LAN-5 cells. Using a monoclonal antibody which recognizes the N-terminal calpastatin domain, it has been shown that this inhibitory protein is almost completely confined in two granule-like structures not surrounded by membranes. Similar calpastatin distribution has been found in other human and in murine cell types, indicating that aggregation of calpastatin is a general property and not an exclusive characteristic of neuronal-like cells. The existence of such calpastatin aggregates is confirmed by the kinetics of calpastatin-activity release during rat liver homogenization, which does not correspond to the rate of appearance of cytosolic proteins or to the disruption of membrane-surrounded organelles. Calpastatin distribution is affected by the intracellular increase in free Ca(2+), which results in calpastatin progressively becoming a soluble protein. However, calpain is distributed in the soluble cell fraction and, in activating conditions, partially accumulates on the plasma membrane. Similar behaviour has been observed in calpastatin localization in LAN-5 cells induced with retinoic acid, suggesting that the proteolytic system is activated during the differentiation process of these cells. The involvement of calpastatin in controlling calpain activity, rather than its activation process, and the utilization of changes in calpastatin localization as a marker of activation of the system is discussed.
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PMID:Changes in intracellular localization of calpastatin during calpain activation. 1051 Mar 15

Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) is up-regulated in Alzheimer's disease brain and localizes to neurofibrillary tangles with the tau protein. Tau is an in vitro tTG substrate, being cross-linked and/or polyaminated. Further, the Gln and Lys residues in tau that are modified by tTG in vitro are located primarily within or adjacent to the microtubule-binding domains. Considering these and other previous findings, this study was carried out to determine if tau is modified in situ by tTG in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, and whether tTG-catalyzed tau polyamination modulates the function and/or metabolism of tau in vitro. For these studies, SH-SY5Y cells stably overexpressing tTG were used. tTG coimmunoprecipitated with tau, and elevating intracellular calcium levels with maitotoxin resulted in a 52 +/- 4% increase in the amount of tTG that coimmunoprecipitated with tau. The increase in association of tTG with tau after treatment with maitotoxin corresponded to a coimmunolocalization of tTG, tTG activity, and tau in the cells. Further, tau was modified by tTG in situ in response to maitotoxin treatment. In vitro polyaminated tau was significantly less susceptible to micro-calpain proteolysis; however, tTG-mediated polyamination of tau did not significantly alter the microtubule-binding capacity of tau. Thus, tau interacts with and is modified by tTG in situ, and modification of tau by tTG alters its metabolism. These data indicate that tau is likely to be modified physiologically and pathophysiologically by tTG, and tTG may play a role in Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Tau is modified by tissue transglutaminase in situ: possible functional and metabolic effects of polyamination. 1053 45

In neuroblastoma LAN-5 cells during calpain activation, in addition to the two expressed 70 kDa and 30 kDa calpastatin forms, other inhibitory species are produced, having molecular masses of 50 kDa and 15 kDa. At longer times of incubation, both native and new calpastatin species disappear. The formation of these new calpastatins as well as the decrease in intracellular total calpastatin activity are mediated by calpain itself, as indicated by the effect of the synthetic calpain inhibitor I, which prevents both degradative processes. Analysis of the calcium concentrations required for the two processes indicates that the first conservative proteolytic event is mediated by micro-calpain, whereas the second one is preferentially carried out by m-calpain. The appearance of the 15 kDa form, containing only the calpastatin repetitive inhibitory domain and identified also in red cells of hypertensive rats as the major inhibitor form, can be considered a marker of intracellular calpain activation, and it can be used for the monitoring of the involvement of calpain in pathological situations.
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PMID:Differential degradation of calpastatin by mu- and m-calpain in Ca(2+)-enriched human neuroblastoma LAN-5 cells. 1085 49

2,5-Hexanedione (2,5-HD), the neurotoxic metabolite of n-hexane, can structurally modify neurofilaments (NF) by pyrrole adduct formation and subsequent covalent cross-linking. 2,5-HD also induces accumulations of NF within the pre-terminal axon. We examined whether exposure of NF to 2,5-HD affected NF degradation. Two different models were used: (1) NF-enriched cytoskeletons isolated from human sciatic nerve were incubated with 2,5-HD in vitro and (2) differentiated human neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-SH) were exposed to 2, 5-HD in culture prior to isolation of cytoskeletal proteins. The cytoskeletal preparations were subsequently incubated with calpain II. The amount of NF-H and NF-L remaining after proteolysis was determined by SDS-PAGE and quantitative immunoblotting. NF-M proteolysis could not be quantified. Incubation of sciatic nerve cytoskeletal preparations with 2,5-HD resulted in cross-linking of all three NF proteins into high molecular weight (HMW) material with a range of molecular weights. Proteolysis of the NF-H and NF-L polypeptides was not affected by 2,5-HD-exposure. Degradation of the HMW material containing NF-H or NF-L was retarded when comparing with degradation of the NF-H and NF-L polypeptides, respectively, from control samples, but not as compared to the corresponding NF polypeptides from 2,5-HD-treated samples. Exposure of SK-N-SH cells to 2,5-HD also resulted in considerable cross-linking of NF. No differences were found between the proteolytic rates of NF-L and NF-H from exposed cells as compared with those subunits from control cells. Moreover, degradation of cross-linked NF-H was not different from monomeric NF-H. In conclusion, whether 2,5-HD affects calpain-mediated degradation of cross-linked NF proteins will depend on which model better reflects NF cross-linking as occurring in 2, 5-HD-induced axonopathy. However, with both models it was demonstrated that exposure of NF proteins to 2,5-HD without subsequent cross-linking is not adequate to inhibit NF proteolysis in vitro by added calpain.
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PMID:Effects of 2,5-hexanedione on calpain-mediated degradation of human neurofilaments in vitro. 1113 63

We have previously reported that, in neuroblastoma LAN-5 cells, calpastatin is in an aggregated state, close to the cell nucleus [de Tullio, Passalacqua, Averna, Salamino, Melloni and Pontremoli (1999) Biochem. J. 343, 467-472]. In the present paper, we demonstrate that aggregated calpastatin is predominantly in a phosphorylated state. An increase in intracellular free [Ca2+] induces both dephosphorylation of calpastatin, through the action of a phosphoprotein phosphatase, and its redistribution as a soluble inhibitor species. cAMP, but not PMA-induced phosphorylation, reverses calpastatin distribution favouring its aggregation. This intracellular reversible mechanism, regulating the level of cytosolic calpastatin, could be considered a strategy through which calpain can escape calpastatin inhibition, especially during earlier steps of its activation process.
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PMID:Changes in intracellular calpastatin localization are mediated by reversible phosphorylation. 1117 Oct 75

The synthetic peptide PrP-(106-126) has previously been shown to be neurotoxic. Here, for the first time, we report that it induces apoptosis in the human neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y. The earliest detectable apoptotic event in this system is the rapid depolarization of mitochondrial membranes, occurring immediately upon treatment of cells with PrP-(106-126). Subsequent to this, cytochrome c release and caspase activation were observed. Caspase inhibitors demonstrated that while the peptide activates caspases they are not an absolute requirement for apoptosis. Parallel to caspase activation, PrP-(106-126) was also observed to trigger a rise in intracellular calcium through release of mitochondrial calcium stores. This leads to the activation of calpains, another family of proteases. A calpain inhibitor demonstrated that while calpains are activated by the peptide they also are not an absolute requirement for apoptosis. Interestingly a combination of caspase and calpain inhibitors significantly inhibited apoptosis. This illustrates alternative pathways leading to apoptosis via caspases and calpains and that blocking both pathways is required to inhibit apoptosis. These results implicate the mitochondrion as a primary site of action of PrP-(106-126).
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PMID:Prion protein fragment PrP-(106-126) induces apoptosis via mitochondrial disruption in human neuronal SH-SY5Y cells. 1153 27

During apoptotic and excitotoxic neuron death, challenged mitochondria release the pro-apoptotic factor cytochrome c. In the cytosol, cytochrome c is capable of binding to the apoptotic protease-activating factor-1 (APAF-1). This complex activates procaspase-9 in the presence of dATP, resulting in caspase-mediated execution of apoptotic neuron death. Many forms of Ca(2+)-mediated neuron death, however, do not lead to prominent activation of the caspase cascade despite significant release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. We demonstrate that elevation of cytosolic Ca(2+) induced prominent degradation of APAF-1 in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells and in a neuronal cell-free apoptosis system. Loss of APAF-1 correlated with a reduced ability of cytochrome c to activate caspase-3-like proteases. Ca(2+) induced the activation of calpains, monitored by the cleavage of full-length alpha-spectrin into a calpain-specific 150-kDa breakdown product. However, pharmacological inhibition of calpain activity indicated that APAF-1 degradation also occurred via calpain-independent pathways. Our data suggest that Ca(2+) inhibits caspase activation during Ca(2+)-mediated neuron death by triggering the degradation of the cytochrome c-binding protein APAF-1.
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PMID:Ca(2+)-induced inhibition of apoptosis in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells: degradation of apoptotic protease activating factor-1 (APAF-1). 1157 34


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