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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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The mutation underlying Huntington disease (HD) is CAG expansion beyond 35 repeats within a novel gene. Recently, new insights into the role of the HD protein (huntingtin) in the pathogenesis of HD have emerged. The CAG is translated and expression of mutant huntingtin is essential for neuronal death. Huntingtin is crucial for normal development and may be regarded as a cell survival gene. Huntingtin is specifically cleaved during apoptosis by a key cysteine protease, apopain, known to play a pivotal role in apoptotic cell death. The rate of cleavage is enhanced by longer polyglutamine tracts, suggesting that inappropriate apoptosis underlies HD. Recently, three proteins have been identified and have been shown specifically to interact with huntingtin, two of these interactions being influenced by CAG length. Several different approaches to develop an animal model for HD include cDNA and YAC transgenics, as well as 'knock-in' strategies. Such a model will be critical for the understanding of the natural history of HD and for the testing of new therapeutic modalities.
Hum Mol Genet 1996
PMID:Huntington disease: new insights into the relationship between CAG expansion and disease. 887 48

Since mammalian cardiac myocytes essentially rely on aerobic energy metabolism, it has been assumed that cardiocytes die in a catastrophic breakdown of cellular homeostasis (i.e. necrosis), if oxygen supply remains below a critical limit. Recent observations, however, indicate that a process of gene-directed cellular suicide (i.e. apoptosis) is activated in terminally differentiated cardiocytes of the adult mammalian heart by ischemia and reperfusion, and by cardiac overload as well. Apoptosis or programmed cell death is an actively regulated process of cellular self destruction, which requires energy and de novo gene expression, and which is directed by an inborn genetic program. The final result of this program is the fragmentation of nuclear DNA into typical 'nucleosomal ladders', while the functional integrity of the cell membrane and of other cellular organelles is still maintained. The critical step in this regulated apoptotic DNA fragmentation is the proteolytic inactivation of poly-[ADP-ribose]-polymerase (PARP) by a group of cysteine proteases with some structural homologies to interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE-related proteases [IRPs] such as apopain, yama and others). PARP catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of nuclear proteins at the sites of spontaneous DNA strand breaks and thereby facilitates the repair of this DNA damage. IRP-mediated destruction of PARP, the 'supervisor of the genome', can be induced by activation of membrane receptors (e.g. FAS or APOI) and other signals, and is inhibited by activation of 'anti-death genes' (e.g. bcl-2). Overload-triggered myocyte apoptosis appears to contribute to the transition to cardiac failure, which can be prevented by therapeutic hemodynamic unloading. In myocardial ischemia, the activation of the apoptotic program in cardiocytes does not exclude their final destiny to catastrophic necrosis with release of cytosolic enzymes, but might be considered as an adaptive process in hypoperfused ventricular zones, sacrificing some jeopardized myocytes to regulated apoptosis, which may be less arrhythmogenic than necrosis with the primary disturbance of membrane function.
Mol Cell Biochem
PMID:Apoptosis in the heart: when and why? 897 66

The interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE) family of cysteine proteases has been implicated in apoptosis. This study tested the effects of a novel pan-ICE family inhibitor, bocaspartyl(OMe)-fluoromethylketone (boc-Asp-CH2F), against low potassium-induced apoptosis of cultured rat cerebellar granule neurons (CGN). A single application of this cell-permeant compound (20 microM) inhibited apoptotic cell death up to 48 h. Classical apoptotic changes were monitored by fluorescence microscopy, DNA fragmentation and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). A control peptidic fluoromethylketone (boc-Thr-CH2F), and inhibitors to calpain (Ac-Leu-Leu-norleucinal), cathepsin B (Z-Phe-Ala-CH2F), and CPP32-like proteases (Z-DEVD-CH2F), failed to prevent apoptotic death. An 35S-methionine incorporation assay verified that, unlike cycloheximide, boc-Asp-CH2F did not inhibit protein synthesis, hence excluding this as a rescuing mechanism. Although ICE was not detected by northern blot analysis, both CPP32 and Nedd2 expression were found to increase during apoptosis. Kinetic assays with cell extracts from boc-Asp-CH2F-treated neurons measured reduced rates of cleavage for DEVD-pNA and LEVD-pNA. At present, ICE-like proteases remain viable candidates for mediating neuronal death.
Mol Psychiatry 1997 May
PMID:Inhibition of the interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme family rescues neurons from apoptotic death. 915 87

Resistance to stress-induced apoptosis was examined in cells in which the expression of hsp70 was either constitutively elevated or inducible by a tetracycline-regulated transactivator. Heat-induced apoptosis was blocked in hsp70-expressing cells, and this was associated with reduced cleavage of the common death substrate protein poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Heat-induced cell death was correlated with the activation of the stress-activated protein kinase SAPK/JNK (c-Jun N-terminal kinase). Activation of SAPK/JNK was strongly inhibited in cells in which hsp70 was induced to a high level, indicating that hsp70 is able to block apoptosis by inhibiting signaling events upstream of SAPK/JNK activation. In contrast, SAPK/JNK activation was not inhibited by heat shock in cells with constitutively elevated levels of hsp70. Cells that constitutively overexpress hsp70 resist apoptosis induced by ceramide, a lipid signaling molecule that is generated by apoptosis-inducing treatments and is linked to SAPK/JNK activation. Similar to heat stress, resistance to ceramide-induced apoptosis occurs in spite of strong SAPK/JNK activation. Therefore, hsp70 is also able to inhibit apoptosis at some point downstream of SAPK/JNK activation. Since PARP cleavage is prevented in both cell lines, these results suggest that hsp70 is able to prevent the effector steps of apoptotic cell death. Processing of the CED-3-related protease caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama/apopain) is inhibited in hsp70-expressing cells; however, the activity of the mature enzyme is not affected by hsp70 in vitro. Caspase processing may represent a critical heat-sensitive target leading to cell death that is inhibited by the chaperoning function of hsp70. The inhibition of SAPK/JNK signaling and apoptotic protease effector steps by hsp70 likely contributes to the resistance to stress-induced apoptosis seen in transiently induced thermotolerance.
Mol Cell Biol 1997 Sep
PMID:Role of the human heat shock protein hsp70 in protection against stress-induced apoptosis. 927 9

Six hours after ultraviolet B (UVB) irradiation (11.6 mJ/cm2), the viability of A431 cells decreased, and, at the same time, fragmentation of genomic DNA into nucleosomal units was observed. Z-Asp-CH2-DCB (100 microM), an inhibitor of interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (caspase-1) and caspase-1-like proteases, markedly inhibited UVB-induced cell death and DNA fragmentation. Both YVAD-CMK, an inhibitor of caspase-1, and DEVD-CHO, an inhibitor of caspase-3, moderately inhibited the UVB-induced cell death. A combination of YVAD-CMK and DEVD-CHO acted additionally in inhibiting cell death. These observations suggest strongly the cooperative involvement of caspases in the apoptosis induced in A431 cells by UVB.
Biochem Mol Biol Int 1997 Sep
PMID:Involvement of caspases in apoptosis induced by ultraviolet B irradiation in A431 human epithelioid tumor cells. 930 45

Upon activation, cell surface death receptors, Fas/APO-1/CD95 and tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (TNFR-1), are attached to cytosolic adaptor proteins, which in turn recruit caspase-8 (MACH/FLICE/Mch5) to activate the interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE)/CED-3 family protease (caspase) cascade. However, it remains unknown whether these apoptotic proteases are generally involved in apoptosis triggered by other stimuli such as Myc and p53. In this study, we provide lines of evidence that a death protease cascade consisting of caspases and serine proteases plays an essential role in Myc-mediated apoptosis. When Rat-1 fibroblasts stably expressing either s-Myc or c-Myc were induced to undergo apoptosis by serum deprivation, a caspase-3 (CPP32)-like protease activity that cleaves a specific peptide substrate, Ac-DEVD-MCA, appeared in the cell lysates. Induction of s-Myc- and c-Myc-mediated apoptotic cell death was effectively prevented by caspase inhibitors such as Z-Asp-CH2-DCB and Ac-DEVD-CHO. Furthermore, exposing the cells to a serine protease inhibitor, 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride (AEBSF), also significantly inhibited s-Myc- and c-Myc-mediated apoptosis and the appearance of the caspase-3-like protease activity in vivo. However, AEBSF did not directly inhibit caspase-3-like protease activity in the apoptotic cell lysates in vitro. Together, these results indicate that caspase-3-like proteases play a critical role in both s-Myc- and c-Myc-mediated apoptosis and that caspase-3-like proteases function downstream of the AEBSF-sensitive step in the signaling pathway of Myc-mediated apoptosis.
Mol Cell Biol 1997 Nov
PMID:A functional role for death proteases in s-Myc- and c-Myc-mediated apoptosis. 934 38

Interleukin (IL)-1 is a proinflammatory cytokine that plays a pivotal role in driving the in vitro proliferation of leukemic cells through autocrine or paracrine pathways. Both IL-1 genes, IL-1 alpha and the prominent IL-1 beta, produce 31 kDa proteins. Whereas the precursor (pro) 31 kDa form of IL-1 alpha is biologically active, pro-IL-1 beta is inactive unless cleaved to its mature form by a cytoplasmic cysteine protease termed IL-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE). Although ICE was first thought to be a unique enzyme with a single biologic activity, several investigators have demonstrated that ICE shares sequence homology with the protein product of ced-3, the gene for cell death of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, and can induce apoptosis in different cellular systems. However, recent data indicate that ICE is a member of an increasingly recognized family of ICE-related molecules whose other members, such as CPP32, do not cleave pro-IL-1 beta but rather are effective inducers of apoptotic cell death. We recently investigated the effect of ICE inhibition on acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) colony growth. We found that inhibition of ICE reduced the production of mature IL-1 beta and suppressed the proliferation of AML colony-forming units, confirming the central role of IL-1 beta in AML progenitor proliferation. These data suggest that the primary role of ICE in AML cells is cleavage of pro-IL-1 beta rather than induction of apoptosis and that the antileukemic activity of specific ICE inhibitors warrants further exploitation.
Cytokines Mol Ther 1996 Mar
PMID:Role of interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE) in leukemia. 938 84

The effects of the non-tumor-promoting protein kinase C (PKC) activator bryostatin 1 and the PKC inhibitors staurosporine and UCN-01 were examined with respect to modulation of 1-[beta-D-arabinofuranosyl]cytosine (ara-C)-induced apoptosis in human myeloid leukemia cells (HL-60) overexpressing the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. HL-60/Bcl-2 cells displayed a 5-fold increase in Bcl-2 protein compared with empty-vector counter-parts (HL-60/pCEP4) but comparable levels of Bax, Mcl-1, and Bcl-xL. After exposure to an equimolar concentration of ara-C (10 microM for 6 hr), HL-60/Bcl-2 cells were significantly less susceptible to apoptosis, DNA fragmentation, and loss of clonogenicity than HL-60/pCEP4 cells. The protective effect of increased Bcl-2 expression was manifested by a failure of ara-C to induce activation/cleavage of the Yama protease (CPP32; caspase-3) and degradation of one of its substrates, poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase to an 85-kDa cleavage product. When HL-60/Bcl-2 cells were preincubated with bryostatin 1 (10 nM; 24 hr) or coincubated with either staurosporine (50 nM; 6 hr) or UCN-01 (300 nM; 6 hr) after a 1-hr preincubation, exposures that exerted minimal effects alone, ara-C-induced apoptosis and DNA fragmentation were restored to levels equivalent to, or greater than, those observed in empty-vector controls. These events were accompanied by restoration of the ability of ara-C to induce CPP32 cleavage and activation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase degradation, and inhibition of colony formation. Western analysis of Bcl-2 protein obtained from overexpressing cells treated with bryostatin 1, staurosporine, or UCN-01 revealed the appearance of a slowly migrating species and a general broadening of the protein band, effects that were insensitive to the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. Alterations in Bcl-2 protein mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were reversed by treatment of lysates with alkaline phosphatase or protein phosphatase 2A; actions of the latter were blocked by the specific phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid. In vivo labeling studies of Bcl-2 protein demonstrated increased incorporation of [32PO4]orthophosphate in drug-treated cells. Last, phosphorylated Bcl-2 failed to display decreased binding to the proapoptotic protein Bax. Collectively, these findings indicate that bryostatin 1, which down-regulates PKC, and staurosporine and UCN-01, which directly inhibit the enzyme, circumvent resistance of Bcl-2-overexpressing leukemic cells to ara-C-induced apoptosis and activation of the protease cascade. They also raise the possibility that modulation of Bcl-2 phosphorylation status contributes to this effect.
Mol Pharmacol 1997 Dec
PMID:Agents that down-regulate or inhibit protein kinase C circumvent resistance to 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine-induced apoptosis in human leukemia cells that overexpress Bcl-2. 939 80

Recent work identified an apoptotic program in gastrulation stage Xenopus embryos (Anderson, J.A., Lewellyn, A.L., Maller, J.L., 1997. Mol. Biol. Cell 8, 1195-1206; Stack, J.H., Newport, J.W., 1997. Development 124, 3185-3195). Here, we characterize in detail this maternal cell death program, which is set up at fertilization and abruptly activated at the onset of gastrulation, following DNA damage or treatment of embryos with inhibitors of transcription, translation, or replication, between the time of fertilization and the midblastula transition (MBT). This apoptotic pathway is activated under tightly regulated developmental control(s): if the same treatments are applied after the MBT the apoptotic response is abrogated. Embryos displayed many characteristic apoptotic features, including DNA fragmentation, caspase activation, and embryonic death was blocked in vivo by the ectopic expression of Bcl-2, or injection of the caspase-3 inhibitor z-DEVD-fmk. The precise timing and the execution of this maternal cell death program is set at fertilization and does not depend on the type of stress applied, on cell cycle progression, or on de novo protein synthesis. This maternal developmental program might palliate the lack of cell cycle checkpoints in the pre-MBT embryo.
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PMID:A developmental timer that regulates apoptosis at the onset of gastrulation. 948 40

Studies of the biochemical mechanisms evoked by conventional treatments for neoplastic diseases point to apoptosis as a key process for elimination of unwanted cells. Although the pathways through which chemotherapeutics promote cell death remain largely unknown, caspase proteases play a central role in the induction of apoptosis in response to a variety of stimuli including tumor necrosis factor, fas ligand, and growth factor deprivation. In this article, we demonstrate the induction of caspase protease activity in MCF7 human breast carcinoma cells exposed to the topoisomerase inhibitor, etoposide. Caspase protease activity was assessed by incubating cell lysates with the known caspase substrates, acetyl-L-aspartic-L-glutamic-L-valyl-L-aspartic acid 4-methyl-7-aminocoumarin or acetyl-L-tyrosyl-L-valyl-L-aspartic acid 4-methyl-7-aminocoumarin. We observed maximal cleavage of acetyl-L-aspartic-L-glutamic-L-valyl-L-aspartic acid 4-methyl-7-aminocoumarin within 6 hr following etoposide addition, a time that precedes cell death. In contrast, acetyl-L-tyrosyl-L-valyl-L-aspartic acid 4-methyl-7-aminocoumarin was resistant to cleavage activity. This substrate cleavage specificity implies that a caspase-3-like protease is activated in response to DNA damage. Consistent with the lysate protease activity, an intracellular marker of caspase activation, poly-ADP ribose polymerase (PARP), was cleaved in a concentration- and time-dependent manner after etoposide-treatment. PARP cleavage followed caspase activation and reached maximum cleavage between 12 and 16 hr. Incubation of the cells with the peptidic caspase inhibitor z-valine-alanine-asparagine-CH2F prevented caspase activation, inhibited PARP cleavage, and inhibited cell death. Thus, etoposide killing of MCF7 cells requires a caspase-3-like protease.
Mol Pharmacol 1998 Mar
PMID:Caspase activation in MCF7 cells responding to etoposide treatment. 949 10


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