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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The cytosolic factor Cif (
cytochrome c
-efflux inducing factor) was activated by the apoptosis inducers staurosporine and anti-Fas antibodies and rapidly induced the efflux of
cytochrome c
from purified human mitochondria. HL-60 cells that stably overexpressed a bcl-2 cDNA transgene (
Bcl-2
:HL-60 cells) contained mitochondria and a cytosol that were resistant to exogenous Cif and that lacked detectable endogenous Cif activity, respectively. Therefore,
Bcl-2
overexpression negated Cif activity and suggested that the requirement for Cif resides upstream of
Bcl-2
on the apoptotic signal transduction pathway. The addition of purified caspase 3, caspase 7, or caspase 8 to the cytosolic extract from
Bcl-2
:HL-60 cells, however, restored Cif activity, demonstrating that the inhibition of Cif by
Bcl-2
overexpression could be overcome by activated caspases. Moreover, the addition of purified caspases to cytosolic extracts prepared from parental HL-60 cells was also sufficient to cause Cif activation, suggesting that caspases might be required for Cif activation. Consistent with these observations, Fas-induced apoptosis in Jurkat cells resulted in caspase 8 activation and subsequently in activation of Cif. Finally, we demonstrate that the activation of Cif correlated with the activation of the
Bcl-2
family member Bid by caspases and that Cif activity was selectively neutralized by anti-Bid antibodies. Taken together, these results indicate that Cif is identical to Bid and that it can be inhibited by
Bcl-2
and activated by caspases. Thus, Cif (Bid) is an important biological regulator for the transduction of apoptotic signals.
...
PMID:Cif (Cytochrome c efflux-inducing factor) activity is regulated by Bcl-2 and caspases and correlates with the activation of Bid. 989 Oct 71
The barrier function of mitochondrial membranes is perturbed early during the apoptotic process. Here we show that the mitochondria contain a caspase-like enzymatic activity cleaving the caspase substrate Z-VAD.afc, in addition to three biological activities previously suggested to participate in the apoptotic process: (a)
cytochrome c
; (b) an apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) which causes isolated nuclei to undergo apoptosis in vitro; and (c) a DNAse activity. All of these factors, which are biochemically distinct, are released upon opening of the permeability transition (PT) pore in a coordinate,
Bcl-2
-inhibitable fashion. Caspase inhibitors fully neutralize the Z-VAD.afc-cleaving activity, have a limited effect on the AIF activity, and have no effect at all on the DNase activities. Purification of proteins reacting with the biotinylated caspase substrate Z-VAD, immunodetection, and immunodepletion experiments reveal the presence of procaspase-2 and -9 in mitochondria. Upon induction of PT pore opening, these procaspases are released from purified mitochondria and become activated. Similarly, upon induction of apoptosis, both procaspases redistribute from the mitochondrion to the cytosol and are processed to generate enzymatically active caspases. This redistribution is inhibited by
Bcl-2
. Recombinant caspase-2 and -9 suffice to provoke full-blown apoptosis upon microinjection into cells. Altogether, these data suggest that caspase-2 and -9 zymogens are essentially localized in mitochondria and that the disruption of the outer mitochondrial membrane occurring early during apoptosis may be critical for their subcellular redistribution and activation.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial release of caspase-2 and -9 during the apoptotic process. 989 20
Investigation of death pathways during cell injury in vivo caused by ischemia and reperfusion is of clinical importance, but technically difficult. Heterogeneity of cell types, differences between organ systems, diversity of death paradigms and exacerbation of tissue damage caused by inflammation are only some of the variables that need to be taken into account. With respect to the identification of necrosis and apoptosis in affected organs, technical issues related to preparation artifacts, occurrence of internucleosomal DNA cleavage in necrotic as well as apoptotic cells and other overlaps in death pathways bear consideration. In that caspase independent as well as caspase dependent processes cause cell death and that caspase inhibitors can act as anti-inflammatory agents, evaluation of ischemic death mechanisms in parenchymal cells needs to be performed with caution. When the effects of inflammation are removed by appropriate in vitro studies using purified or cultured cells, several mitochondrial factors that lead to cell death can be studied. Substantial evidence exists for the participation of electron transport defects, mitochondrial permeability transitions (MPT) and release of
cytochrome c
from mitochondria, effected by pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bax. The anti-apoptotic protein
Bcl-2
exerts an overriding protective role in this type of injury by preserving mitochondrial structure and function. In contrast, caspase inhibitors cannot offer long-term protection to ischemically injured parenchymal cells regardless of how effectively they can inhibit apoptotic events, if the cells have suffered permanent mitochondrial damage impairing respiration.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of cell death in hypoxia/reoxygenation injury. 991 96
We studied the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis in the prostate cancer cell line LNCaP and whether overexpression of caspase activity could force this cell line to undergo apoptosis. The inhibitor of phosphomevalonate decarboxylase, sodium phenylacetate, and the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine induced (a) release of
cytochrome c
from the mitochondria to the cytosol; (b) reduction in mitochondrial transmembrane potential; (c) proteolytic processing of caspase-3 and -7 but not -2; (d) cleavage of the DEVD substrate and the death substrates poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and DNA fragmentation factor; and (e) apoptosis. The panspecific inhibitor of caspase activation N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe)-fluoromethylketone (z-VAD-FMK) prevented all of these events except release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
into the cytosol. None of these apoptotic signaling events were elicited by staurosporine or sodium phenylacetate treatment of LNCaP-
Bcl-2
cells that overexpress the oncoprotein
Bcl-2
. Because caspase-7 is activated in every model of apoptosis that we have characterized thus far, we wished to learn whether overexpression of this protease could directly cause apoptosis of LNCaP cells. By using a replication-defective adenovirus, overexpression of caspase-7 protein in both LNCaP and LNCaP-
Bcl-2
cells was accompanied by induction of cleavage of the DEVD substrate and TUNEL. These studies have demonstrated that caspase-7 and -3 are critical mediators of apoptosis in LNCaP cells. Caspase-7 was proteolytically activated in every model of apoptosis that we have developed, and the overexpression of it induced apoptosis of LNCaP and LNCaP-
Bcl-2
cells. Thus, adenoviral-mediated transfer of caspase-7 may offer a new effective approach for the treatment of prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Signaling pathway activated during apoptosis of the prostate cancer cell line LNCaP: overexpression of caspase-7 as a new gene therapy strategy for prostate cancer. 992 51
Release of
cytochrome c
is important in many forms of apoptosis. Recent studies of CD95 (Fas/APO-1)-induced apoptosis have implicated caspase-8 cleavage of Bid, a BH3 domain-containing proapoptotic member of the
Bcl-2
family, in this release. We now demonstrate that both receptor-induced (CD95 and tumor necrosis factor) and chemical-induced apoptosis result in a similar time-dependent activation of caspases-3, -7, -8, and -9 in Jurkat T cells and human leukemic U937 cells. In receptor-mediated apoptosis, the caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD. FMK), inhibits apoptosis prior to commitment to cell death by inhibiting the upstream activator caspase-8, cleavage of Bid, release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
, processing of effector caspases, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, and externalization of phosphatidylserine. However, Z-VAD.FMK inhibits chemical-induced apoptosis at a stage after commitment to cell death by inhibiting the initiator caspase-9 and the resultant postmitochondrial activation of effector caspases. Cleavage of Bid but not release of
cytochrome c
is blocked by Z-VAD.FMK demonstrating that in chemical-induced apoptosis
cytochrome c
release is caspase-independent and is not mediated by activation of Bid. We propose that caspases form an integral part of the cell death-inducing mechanism in receptor-mediated apoptosis, whereas in chemical-induced apoptosis they act solely as executioners of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Distinct caspase cascades are initiated in receptor-mediated and chemical-induced apoptosis. 998 52
Mitochondria play a key part in the regulation of apoptosis (cell death). Their intermembrane space contains several proteins that are liberated through the outer membrane in order to participate in the degradation phase of apoptosis. Here we report the identification and cloning of an apoptosis-inducing factor, AIF, which is sufficient to induce apoptosis of isolated nuclei. AIF is a flavoprotein of relative molecular mass 57,000 which shares homology with the bacterial oxidoreductases; it is normally confined to mitochondria but translocates to the nucleus when apoptosis is induced. Recombinant AIF causes chromatin condensation in isolated nuclei and large-scale fragmentation of DNA. It induces purified mitochondria to release the apoptogenic proteins
cytochrome c
and caspase-9. Microinjection of AIF into the cytoplasm of intact cells induces condensation of chromatin, dissipation of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and exposure of phosphatidylserine in the plasma membrane. None of these effects is prevented by the wide-ranging caspase inhibitor known as Z-VAD.fmk. Overexpression of
Bcl-2
, which controls the opening of mitochondrial permeability transition pores, prevents the release of AIF from the mitochondrion but does not affect its apoptogenic activity. These results indicate that AIF is a mitochondrial effector of apoptotic cell death.
...
PMID:Molecular characterization of mitochondrial apoptosis-inducing factor. 998 1
The proteasome inhibitors lactacystin and AcLLNal induced p53-independent apoptosis in two human glioma cell lines, and the apoptosis was accompanied by up-regulation of immunoreactive wild-type p53, p21Waf1, Mdm2, and p27Kip1. Pretreatment with cycloheximide decreased the induction of cell death independently of p53 protein status, suggesting that the up-regulation of short-lived proteins is associated with proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis. Caspase-3-like proteases were activated in the proteasome inhibitor-mediated apoptosis, and the induction of cell death was inhibited more effectively in the presence of z-VAD.fmk than in the presence of Ac-DEVD.fmk, suggesting that caspases other than caspase-3 are involved. Nonetheless, there were no significant alterations in levels of immunoreactive
Bcl-2
, Bcl-X(L), Bax, Bad, and Bak, nor any evidence of
cytochrome c
release into cytosol and dissipation of delta(psi)m. Thus, the proteasome inhibitor-induced apoptosis is mediated by a mitochondria-independent mechanism, and the once activated caspase-3 does not cause the
cytochrome c
release and the delta(psi)m disruption.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibitors induce mitochondria-independent apoptosis in human glioma cells. 998 1
It has been suggested that the C-terminal domain of
Bcl-2
family members may contain a signal anchor sequence that targets these proteins to the mitochondrial outer membrane. We have investigated the consequence of deleting this domain upon
cytochrome c
release in yeast strains that coexpress truncated forms of Bax (i.e. BaxA) and Bcl-X(L) (i.e. Bcl-X(L)delta). We find that (i) Bax(delta) is as efficient as full-length Bax in promoting
cytochrome c
release, but Bcl-x(L)delta has remarkably reduced rescuing ability compared to full-length Bcl-x(L); (ii) full-length Bcl-X(L) protein acts by relocalizing Bax from the mitochondrial fraction to the soluble cytosolic fraction; (iii) Bax undergoes N-terminal cleavage when expressed in yeast, which is prevented by coexpression of Bcl-X(L), suggesting that Bcl-x(L) may mask the cleavage site of Bax through a direct physical interaction of the two proteins.
...
PMID:Role of the C-terminal domain of Bax and Bcl-XL in their localization and function in yeast cells. 998 10
Apoptosis is an essential physiological process for the selective elimination of cells, which is involved in a variety of biological events. The
Bcl-2
family is the best characterized protein family involved in the regulation of apoptotic cell death, consisting of anti-apoptotic and pro-apoptotic members. The anti-apoptotic members of this family, such as
Bcl-2
and Bcl-XL, prevent apoptosis either by sequestering proforms of death-driving cysteine proteases called caspases (a complex called the apoptosome) or by preventing the release of mitochondrial apoptogenic factors such as
cytochrome c
and AIF (apoptosis-inducing factor) into the cytoplasm. After entering the cytoplasm,
cytochrome c
and AIF directly activate caspases that cleave a set of cellular proteins to cause apoptotic changes. In contrast, pro-apoptotic members of this family, such as Bax and Bak, trigger the release of caspases from death antagonists via heterodimerization and also by inducing the release of mitochondrial apoptogenic factors into the cytoplasm via acting on mitochondrial permeability transition pore, thereby leading to caspase activation. Thus, the
Bcl-2
family of proteins acts as a critical life-death decision point within the common pathway of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Role of Bcl-2 family proteins in apoptosis: apoptosomes or mitochondria? 999 May 5
Caspases, a family of specific proteases, have central roles in apoptosis [1]. Caspase activation in response to diverse apoptotic stimuli involves the relocalisation of
cytochrome c
from mitochondria to the cytoplasm where it stimulates the proteolytic processing of caspase precursors. Cytochrome c release is controlled by members of the
Bcl-2
family of apoptosis regulators [2] [3]. The anti-apoptotic members
Bcl-2
and Bcl-xL may also control caspase activation independently of
cytochrome c
relocalisation or may inhibit a positive feedback mechanism [4] [5] [6] [7]. Here, we investigate the role of
Bcl-2
family proteins in the regulation of caspase activation using a model cell-free system. We found that
Bcl-2
and Bcl-xL set a threshold in the amount of
cytochrome c
required to activate caspases, even in soluble extracts lacking mitochondria. Addition of dATP (which stimulates the procaspase-processing factor Apaf-1 [8] [9]) overcame inhibition of caspase activation by
Bcl-2
, but did not prevent the control of
cytochrome c
release from mitochondria by
Bcl-2
. Cytochrome c release was accelerated by active caspase-3 and this positive feedback was negatively regulated by
Bcl-2
. These results provide evidence for a mechanism to amplify caspase activation that is suppressed at several distinct steps by
Bcl-2
, even after
cytochrome c
is released from mitochondria.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 regulates amplification of caspase activation by cytochrome c. 1002 89
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