Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (Bcl-2)
33,771 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Several investigators have reported on the clinical effects of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or the combination of 5-FU plus interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) on patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma. It has also been reported that apoptosis induced by 5-FU is due to the effects on DNA synthesis and functional RNA synthesis. In the present study, we examine the biological mechanisms underlying 5-FU or the combination of 5-FU plus IFN-gamma, using the colorectal carcinoma cell line, COLO 201, 5-FU and IFN-gamma independently or additively induced apoptosis in COLO 201 in a dose- and time-dependent manner, which was correlated with the down-regulation of Bcl-2 and the up-regulation of Bax. An interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE)-like protease inhibitor (but not an ICE-inhibitor) blocked apoptosis induced by only 5-FU. These results suggest that 5-FU has the capacity to induce apoptosis in COLO 201, resulting from the up-regulation of Bax; the apoptosis-inducing signal of 5-FU seems to be different from that of IFN-gamma. Thereby, 5-FU and IFN-gamma have additional effects on the induction of apoptosis. This finding provides an experimental basis for clinical therapy using 5-FU and/or IFN-gamma for colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Mechanisms underlying apoptosis induced by combination of 5-fluorouracil and interferon-gamma. 938 85

N18 are murine neuroblastoma cells that underwent cell death upon serum deprivation or inhibition of protein synthesis by means of cycloheximide (CHX). In both cases, an ultrastructural morphology and an internucleosomal pattern of DNA fragmentation typical of apoptosis were found. However, electron microscopy revealed abundant lipid vesicles in the cytoplasm of CHX-treated cells that were not found in their serum-deprived counterparts. In addition, when both types of apoptotic cells were compared by means of flow cytometry and chromatin staining with propidium iodide, the former showed consistently less fluorescence than the latter. Therefore, in N18 cells, both apoptotic processes seemed to differ at a structural level. At a functional level, we found that apoptosis was blocked by the protease inhibitor TLCK in CHX-treated but not in serum-deprived cells. On the other hand, we generated N18 clones that overexpressed Bcl-2 protein. After a period of 48 h we found that identical levels of Bcl-2 protein were able to block apoptosis in serum-deprived but not in CHX-treated cells. In conclusion, two different biochemical pathways leading to apoptosis seem to coexist in N18 neuroblastoma cells.
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PMID:Serum deprivation and protein synthesis inhibition induce two different apoptotic processes in N18 neuroblastoma cells. 947 51

Infection of erythroid-lineage cells by human parvovirus B19 is characterized by a gradual cytocidal effect. Accumulating evidence now implicates the nonstructural (NS1) protein of the virus in cytotoxicity, but the mechanism underlying the NS1-induced cell death is not known. Using a stringent regulatory system, we demonstrate that NS1 cytotoxicity is closely related to apoptosis, as evidenced by cell morphology, genomic DNA fragmentation, and cell cycle analysis with the human erythroleukemia cell line K562 and the erythropoietin-dependent megakaryocytic cell line UT-7/Epo. Apoptosis was significantly inhibited by an interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta)-converting enzyme (ICE)/CED-3 family protease inhibitor, Ac-DEVD-CHO (CPP32; caspase 3), whereas a similar inhibitor of ICE (caspase 1), Ac-YVAD-CHO, had no effect. Furthermore, stable expression of the human Bcl-2 proto-oncogene resulted in near-total protection from cell death in response to NS1 induction. Mutations engineered into the nucleoside triphosphate-binding domain of NS1 significantly rescued cells from NS1-induced apoptosis without having any effect on NS1-induced activation of the IL-6 gene expression which is mediated by NF-kappaB. Furthermore, using pentoxifylline, an inhibitor of NF-kappaB activation, we demonstrate that the NF-kappaB-mediated IL-6 activation by NS1 is uncoupled from the apoptotic pathway. This functional dissection indicates a complexity underlying the biochemical function of human parvovirus NS1 in transcriptional activation and induction of apoptosis. Our findings indicate that NS1 of parvovirus B19 induces cell death by apoptosis in at least erythroid-lineage cells by a pathway that involves caspase 3, whose activation may be a key event during NS1-induced cell death.
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PMID:Human parvovirus B19 nonstructural (NS1) protein induces apoptosis in erythroid lineage cells. 952 24

Nitric oxide (NO) promotes apoptotic cell death in the mouse macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 and in the human promyelocytic leukaemia cell line U937, which exemplifies p53-dependent and p53-independent executive death pathways. Here, we followed the cleavage of two caspase substrates during NO-intoxication, assaying poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and U1-70kDa small ribonucleoprotein (U1-70kDa) degradation. By using pharmacological inhibitors, we found that Z-aspartyl-2,6-dichlorobenzoyloxymethylketone (Z-Asp-CH2-DCB; 100 microM), a caspase-like protease inhibitor, completely blocked S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO)-induced apoptosis in both RAW 264.7 and U937 cells (IC50 = 50 microM for RAW 264.7 macrophages vs. IC50 = 33 microM for U937 cells). Notably, a characterized caspase-3 (Ac-DEVD-CHO) inhibitor left NO-induced DNA fragmentation and the appearance of an apoptotic morphology unaltered, although completely blocking caspase-3 activity. However, Z-Asp-CH2-DCB suppressed protease-mediated U1-70kDa cleavage and DNA fragmentation in parallel. In contrast, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage in U937 cells was only delayed by Z-Asp-CH2-DCB, while poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase digestion in RAW 264.7 macrophages proceeded unaltered. We further compared U1-70kDa and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage in stably Bcl-2 transfected RAW 264.7 macrophages. Rbcl2-2, a Bcl-2 overexpressing clone, suppressed DNA fragmentation and U1-70kDa digestion in response to GSNO, although allowing delayed but complete poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase degradation. Conclusively, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage not causatively coincided with the appearance of other apoptotic parameters. Our results suggest that NO-induced apoptosis demands a Z-Asp-CH2-DCB inhibitable caspase activity, most likely distinct from caspase-3 and caspase-1. NO-mediated executive apoptotic signaling results in U1-70kDa and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage. Whereas U1-70kDa digestion closely correlates to the occurrence of apoptotic parameters such as DNA fragmentation or an apoptotic morphology, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-breakdown does not.
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PMID:Protease activation during nitric oxide-induced apoptosis: comparison between poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and U1-70kDa cleavage. 967 Nov 15

Activated microglia have been implicated in the regulation of neuronal cell death. However, the biochemical mechanism for neuronal death triggered by activated microglia is still unclear. When treated with activated microglia, neuronal PC12 cells undergo apoptosis accompanied by caspase-3-like protease activation and DNA fragmentation. Apoptotic bodies formed were subsequently phagocytosed by neighboring activated microglia. Pretreatment of the cells with the caspase-3-like protease inhibitor N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde did not reverse this cell death. Although Bcl-2 overexpression in the cells caused the inhibition of caspase-3-like protease activity and DNA fragmentation and the effective interference of apoptosis induced by deprivation of trophic factors, it could not suppress the activated microglia-induced neuronal death. At the electron microscopic level, degenerating cells with high levels of Bcl-2 were characterized by slightly condensed chromatins forming irregular-shaped masses, severely disintegrated perikarya, and marked vacuolation. Various protease inhibitors tested did not inhibit this cell death, whereas the radical oxygen species scavenger N-acetyl-L-cysteine significantly suppressed this death. Altogether, our study provides an alternative death pathway for the activated microglia-induced neuronal death by blockage of the caspase-3 protease cascade.
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PMID:A predominant apoptotic death pathway of neuronal PC12 cells induced by activated microglia is displaced by a non-apoptotic death pathway following blockage of caspase-3-dependent cascade. 1033 72

alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP) is an oncoembryonal protein with multiple cell growth regulating, differentiating and immunosuppressive activities. Previous studies have shown that treatment of tumor cells in vitro with 1-10 microM AFP produces significant suppression of tumor cell growth by inducing dose-dependent cytotoxicity, but the molecular mechanisms underlying these AFP functions are obscure. Here, we show that AFP cytotoxicity is closely related to apoptosis, as shown by cell morphology, nuclear DNA fragmentation and caspase-3-like activity resulting in cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Apoptosis was significantly inhibited by a CPP32 family protease inhibitor whereas a general caspase inhibitor had no inhibitory effect, showing some enhancement of AFP-mediated cell death. Using fluorogenic caspase substrates, we found that caspase-3-like proteases were activated as early as 4 h after treatment of Raji cells with 15 microM AFP, whereas caspase-1, caspase-8, and caspase-9-like activity was not detected during the time interval 0.5-17 h. AFP treatment of Raji cells increased Bcl-2 protein, showing that AFP-induced apoptosis is not explained by downregulation of the Bcl-2 gene. This also suggests that AFP operates downstream of the Bcl-2-sensitive step. AFP notably decreased basal levels of soluble and membrane-bound Fas ligand. Incubation of AFP-sensitive tumor cells (HepG2, Raji) with neutralizing anti-Fas, anti-tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)1 or anti-TNFR2 mAb did not prevent AFP-induced apoptosis, demonstrating its independence of Fas-dependent and TNFR-dependent signaling. In addition, it was found that cells resistant to TNF-induced (Raji) or Fas-induced (MCF-7) apoptosis are, nevertheless, sensitive to AFP-mediated cell death. In contrast, cells sensitive to Fas-mediated cell death (Jurkat) are completely resistant to AFP. Taken as a whole, our data demonstrate that: (a) AFP induces apoptosis in tumor cells independently of Fas/Fas ligand or TNFR/TNF signaling pathways, and (b) AFP-mediated cell death involves activation of the effector caspase-3-like proteases, but is independent of upstream activation of the initiator caspase-1, caspase-8, and caspase-9-like proteases.
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PMID:alpha-fetoprotein causes apoptosis in tumor cells via a pathway independent of CD95, TNFR1 and TNFR2 through activation of caspase-3-like proteases. 1058 68

The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is the principal mechanism for the degradation of short-lived proteins in eukaryotic cells. We demonstrated that treatment of THP-1 human monocytic leukemia cells with Z-LLL-CHO, a reversible proteasome inhibitor, induced cell death through an apoptotic pathway. Apoptosis in THP-1 cells induced by Z-LLL-CHO involved a cytochrome c-dependent pathway, which included the release of mitochondrial cytochrome c, activation of caspase-9 and -3, and cleavage of Bcl-2 into a shortened 22-kDa fragment. Induction of apoptosis by protease inhibitor also was detected in U937 and TF-1 leukemia cell lines and cells obtained from acute myelogenous leukemia patients but not in normal human blood monocytes. Treatment of human blood monocytes with Z-LLL-CHO did not induce apoptosis or Bcl-2 cleavage in these cells that rarely proliferate. Interestingly, when THP-1 cells were induced to undergo monocytic differentiation by bryostatin 1, a naturally occurring protein kinase C activator, they were no longer susceptible to apoptosis induced by Z-LLL-CHO. Bryostatin 1-induced differentiation of THP-1 cells was associated with growth arrest, acquisition of adherent capacity, and expression of membrane markers characteristic of blood monocytes. Likewise, differentiated THP-1 cells were refractory to Z-LLL-CHO-induced cytochrome c release, caspase activation, and Bcl-2 cleavage. Resistance to Z-LLL-CHO-induced apoptosis in differentiated THP-1 cells was not due to cell cycle arrest. These findings show that the action of proteasome inhibitors is mediated primarily through a cytochrome c-dependent pathway and induces apoptosis in leukemic cells that are not differentiated.
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PMID:Human THP-1 monocytic leukemic cells induced to undergo monocytic differentiation by bryostatin 1 are refractory to proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis. 1096 81

Tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) is a 32 kDa serine protease inhibitor found at high levels in extracellular matrix. Recombinant human TFPI-2 has recently been shown to be a strong inhibitor of trypsin, plasmin, plasma kallikrein, and factor XIa amidolytic activity. Earlier studies in our laboratory showed that the expression of TFPI-2 is lost during tumor progression in human gliomas. We stably transfected this protease inhibitor in multiform glioblastoma cell line (SNB-19) and in low-grade glioma cell line (Hs683) in sense and antisense orientation respectively. This confirmed that the upregulation/down-regulation of TFPI-2 plays a significant role in the invasive behavior of human gliomas both in vitro and in vivo models. Collectively, these results suggested an idea to determine whether TFPI-2 is necessary for cell survival and inhibition of tumor formation in nude mice, due to apoptosis of intracerebrally injected SNB-19 cells. In the present study we determined p-ERK levels and found that they are decreased in TFPI-2 over-expressed clones (SNB-19) and increased in TFPI-2 down-regulated clones (Hs683). We also checked the levels of BAX/BCl-2, caspases (for e.g., 9, 7, 3, 8), PARP, cytochrome-c and Apaf-1. Moreover, the increase of apoptosis in vitro is associated with increased and decreased expression of apoptotic protein BAX in sense clones (SNB-19) and antisense clones (Hs683) respectively, when compared to controls and vice versa with Bcl-2 the anti-apoptotic protein. Caspases (9, 7 and 3), cytochrome-c, Apaf-1 and PARP levels are increased in SNB-19 and decreased in Hs683. Caspase 8 was not expressed in either cell line. Caspases 9 and 3 activity assay revealed higher activity in sense clones (SNB-19) but lesser in antisense clones (Hs683) compared to controls. This is the first report of TFPI-2 playing a novel role in cell survival in human gliomas.
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PMID:A novel role of tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 in apoptosis of malignant human gliomas. 1149 41

The proteasome pathway is important for the turnover of many regulatory proteins. This pathway has recently become a target for antitumor agents and several research groups have demonstrated that inhibitors with specificities for the proteasome are potent apoptosis-inducing agents. Many mechanisms by which proteasome inhibitors exert their effects have been suggested, including inhibition of NF-kappa B activity and stabilization of the p53 tumor suppressor protein. We investigated the ability of inhibitors with specificities for the proteasome and for another protein degradation enzyme, calpain, to sensitize a murine B-cell lymphoma with constitutive NF-kappa B1 homodimer activity and high expression of Bcl-2 protein to radiation-induced apoptosis. Protease inhibitors tested were calpain inhibitor I, calpain inhibitor II, calpeptin, MG132, and Lactacystin. All five inhibitors induced apoptosis and sensitized cells to radiation despite the maintenance of Bcl-2 protein levels throughout the course of treatment. An electrophoretic migration shift assay for NF-kappa B1 activity provided evidence that reversal of NF-kappa B activity was not required for induction of cell death; however, p53 levels were elevated for all inhibitors tested. HL-60 cells, devoid of p53, could not be sensitized to radiation by MG132 treatment, suggesting that p53 was important for cell death induced by combined treatment with protease inhibitors and radiation. We concluded that protease inhibitors are capable of overcoming the protective effects of Bcl-2 to induce apoptosis and suggest that protease inhibitor treatment, when combined with ionizing radiation, leads to p53-mediated apoptosis.
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PMID:Protease inhibitors restore radiation-induced apoptosis to Bcl-2-expressing lymphoma cells. 1174 2

In vitro studies suggest that resistance to chemotherapy-induced apoptosis might explain poor response to therapy in fatal cases. Actual execution of apoptosis depends on proper functioning of effector caspases, particularly caspase 3, and on the expression levels of apoptosis-regulating proteins, including Bcl-2 and the recently identified granzyme B- specific protease inhibitor 9 (PI9). Thus, high levels of caspase 3 activation should reflect proper functioning of the apoptosis pathways, resulting in chemotherapy-sensitive neoplastic cells and a favorable prognosis. We tested this hypothesis by quantifying numbers of tumor cells positive for active caspase 3, Bcl-2, and PI9, respectively, in pretreatment biopsies of systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) patients and by comparing these numbers with clinical outcome. Activation of caspase 3 in more than 5% of the tumor cells was strongly correlated with a highly favorable outcome. High numbers of Bcl-2- and PI9-positive tumor cells were found to predict unfavorable prognosis. This prognostic effect was strongly related to anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) status: ALK-positive ALCL had significantly higher levels of active caspase 3, while high expression of the antiapoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and PI9 was almost completely restricted to ALK-negative cases. In conclusion, high numbers of active caspase 3-positive tumor cells predict a highly favorable prognosis in systemic ALCL patients. Poor prognosis is strongly related to high numbers of Bcl-2- and PI9-positive neoplastic cells. These data support the notion that a favorable response to chemotherapy depends on an intact apoptosis cascade. Moreover, these data indicate that differences in prognosis between ALK-positive and ALK-negative ALCL might be explained by differences in expression of apoptosis-inhibiting proteins.
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PMID:Expression levels of apoptosis-related proteins predict clinical outcome in anaplastic large cell lymphoma. 1203 86


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