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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It has been suggested that the ratio of
Bcl-2
family proapoptotic proteins to antiapoptotic proteins determines the sensitivity of leukemic cells to apoptosis. However, it is believed that
Bcl-2
family proteins exert their function on apoptosis only when they target to the mitochondrial outer membrane. The vinblastine-resistant T-lymphoblastic leukemic cell line CEM/VLB100 has increased sensitivity to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha)-induced cytochrome c release, mitochondrial respiratory inhibition, and consequently apoptosis, compared with parental CEM cells. However, there was no difference between the two cell lines in the expression of
Bcl-2
family proteins
Bcl-2
, Bcl-XL, Bcl-XS, Bad, and Bax at the whole cell level, as analyzed by Western blotting.
Bcl-2
mainly located to mitochondria and light membrane as a
membrane-bound
protein, whereas Bcl-XL was located in both mitochondria and cytosol. Similar levels of both
Bcl-2
and Bcl-XL were present in the resting mitochondria of the two cell lines. Although the proapoptotic proteins Bcl-XS, Bad, and Bax were mainly located in the cytosol, CEM/VLB100 mitochondria expressed higher levels of these proapoptotic proteins. Subcellular redistribution of the
Bcl-2
family proteins was detected in a cell-free system by both Western blotting and flow cytometry after exposure to TNF-alpha. The levels of
Bcl-2
family proteins were not altered at the whole cell level by TNF-alpha. However, after exposure to TNF-alpha, Bax, Bad, and Bcl-XS translocated from the cytosol to the mitochondria of both cell lines. An increase in
Bcl-2
levels was observed in CEM mitochondria, which showed resistance to TNF-alpha-induced cytochrome c release. By contrast, decreased mitochondrial
Bcl-2
was observed in CEM/VLB100 cells, which released cytochrome c from the mitochondria and underwent apoptosis as detected by fluorescence microscopy. We conclude that mitochondrial levels of
Bcl-2
family proteins may determine the sensitivity of leukemic cells to apoptosis and that, furthermore, these levels may change rapidly after exposure of cells to toxic stimuli.
...
PMID:Subcellular distribution and redistribution of Bcl-2 family proteins in human leukemia cells undergoing apoptosis. 1009 Sep 46
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.
...
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
Apoptosis is characterised by a series of typical morphological features, such as shrinkage of the cell, fragmentation into
membrane-bound
apoptotic bodies and rapid phagocytosis by neighbouring cells. This paper reviews the current knowledge on the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis as they relate to the morphologic hallmarks and their implications for the detection of apoptosis in cardiac tissue. Activation of cysteine proteases called caspases plays a major role in the execution of apoptosis. These proteases selectively cleave vital cellular substrates, which results in apoptotic morphology and internucleosomal fragmentation of DNA by selectively activated DNases. In response to several pro-apoptotic signals, mitochondria release caspase activating factors, that initiate an escalating caspase cascade and commit the cell to die. Members of the
Bcl-2
oncoprotein family control mitochondrial events and are able to prevent, or induce, both apoptotic and non-apoptotic types of cell death. This suggests that different types of cell death share common mechanisms in the early phases, whereas activation of caspases determines the phenotype of cell death. Detection of apoptotic cells in tissue samples currently relies on the TUNEL assay. TUNEL-positive cardiomyocytes show morphological features of apoptosis and the typical ladder pattern in DNA electrophoresis. Thus, provided that the staining protocol is carefully standardised, this quantitative methodology provides reproducible results of the occurrence of cardiomyocyte apoptosis in cardiac samples. Recently, potentially more specific assays based on analysis of DNA fragmentation or demonstration of caspase activation have been developed. Applicability of these assays to demonstrate cardiomyocyte apoptosis should be tested.
...
PMID:Morphologic and biochemical hallmarks of apoptosis. 1072 74
The pro-apoptotic activity of the
Bcl-2
family member Bax has been shown to be facilitated by homodimerization. However, it is unknown whether
Bcl-2
or Bcl-x(L) have to homodimerize to protect cells from apoptosis. Here we show by co-immunoprecipitation and FPLC analyses that while Bax multimerizes and forms heterodimers with
Bcl-2
, there is no evidence for
Bcl-2
homodimerization, even in conditions under which
Bcl-2
protects cells from apoptosis. Immunofluorescence studies confirmed that Bax can attract active, soluble
Bcl-2
to mitochondrial membranes, but that nuclear/ER
membrane-bound
Bcl-2
was incapable of dislocating soluble
Bcl-2
. The failure of
Bcl-2
to homodimerize is due to structural constraints as versions of
Bcl-2
deleted or mutated in the BH1 and BH2 domains effectively dimerized with wild-type
Bcl-2
and were dislocated by
Bcl-2
inside cells. These data indicate that naturally occurring
Bcl-2
does not expose protein domains that mediate homodimerization and therefore most likely acts as a monomer to protect cells from apoptosis.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 is a monomeric protein: prevention of homodimerization by structural constraints. 1074 22
Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) induces rapid and transient hyperplasia of alveolar epithelial type II cells. We sought to determine components of the apoptotic process involved in the resolution of this hyperplasia and the fate of the apoptotic cells. Rats received intrabronchial instillation of 5 mg KGF/kg body weight or diluent. Lungs were fixed 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 days later. Apoptosis was identified by TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL), double-labeling for TUNEL and the type II cell marker MNF116, and electron microscopy. Fas, FasL, Bax,
Bcl-2
, and pro- and active caspase-3 were studied by immunohistochemistry. Changes were quantified by stereology. Cell type specificity was investigated by immunofluorescence double staining. Type II cells exhibited Fas, FasL,
Bcl-2
, and procaspase-3 irrespective of treatment and time. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed Fas at the apical type II cell membrane. Bax staining was prominent in controls (45-95% of type II cell surface fraction), markedly decreased during hyperplasia at days 2 (20-40%) and 3 (0-10%), and reappeared at day 7 (25-45%) when apoptosis was prominent. Remnants of apoptotic type II cells were incorporated in
membrane-bound
vacuoles of type II cell neighbors as well as alveolar macrophages. The results indicate that type II cells can enter the Fas/FasL/caspase-3 pathway regulated by Bax and
Bcl-2
. High
Bcl-2
:Bax levels favor type II cell survival and a low rate of apoptosis during hyperplasia. Low
Bcl-2
:Bax levels favor type II cell apoptosis during resolution. Because of time-dependent changes that occur within a short time, the KGF-treated rat lung provides a useful in vivo model to investigate apoptosis in the context of tissue remodeling and repair.
...
PMID:Alveolar epithelial type II cell apoptosis in vivo during resolution of keratinocyte growth factor-induced hyperplasia in the rat. 1095 22
The short life span of granulocytes, which limits many inflammatory responses, is thought to be influenced by the
Bcl-2
protein family, death receptors such as CD95 (Fas/APO-1), stress-activated protein kinases such as p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and proinflammatory cytokines like granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). To clarify the roles of these various regulators in granulocyte survival, we have investigated the spontaneous apoptosis of granulocytes in culture and that induced by Fas ligand or chemotherapeutic drugs, using cells from normal, CD95-deficient lpr, or vav-bcl-2 transgenic mice. CD95-induced apoptosis, which required receptor aggregation by recombinant Fas ligand or the
membrane-bound
ligand, was unaffected by G-CSF treatment or
Bcl-2
overexpression. Conversely, spontaneous and drug-induced apoptosis occurred normally in lpr granulocytes but were suppressed by G-CSF treatment or
Bcl-2
overexpression. Although activation of p38 MAPK has been implicated in granulocyte death, their apoptosis actually was markedly accelerated by specific inhibitors of this kinase. These results suggest that G-CSF promotes granulocyte survival largely through the
Bcl-2
-controlled pathway, whereas CD95 regulates a distinct pathway to apoptosis that is not required for either their spontaneous or drug-induced death. Moreover, p38 MAPK signaling contributes to granulocyte survival rather than their apoptosis.
...
PMID:Fas ligand, Bcl-2, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase: Regulators of distinct cell death and survival pathways in granulocytes. 1103 12
It has been observed that the progressive ascitic growth of a transplantable T cell lymphoma of spontaneous origin, designated as Dalton's lymphoma (DL), induces inhibition of various immune responses and is associated with an involution of the thymus accompanied by a massive depletion of the cortical region and alteration in the distribution of thymocytes, with a decrease in CD4+CD8+, CD4+CD8- and CD4-CD8+ thymocytes. Morphological evaluation of thymocytes from DL-bearing mice revealed that with the progression of DL, a majority of thymocytes exhibited morphological features characteristic of apoptotic cell death, which included contracted cell bodies, condensed, uniformly circumscribed and densely stained chromatin, and
membrane-bound
apoptotic bodies containing one or more nuclear fragments. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of the DNA extracted from the thymocytes of DL-bearing mice revealed DNA fragmentation that increased concomitantly with the progression of DL and showed an oligonucleosomal DNA ladder pattern upon agarose gel electrophoresis, a hallmark of apoptotic cell death. Attempts to identify apoptotic factor(s) showed that the serum of DL-bearing mice contained certain soluble factor(s) that augmented the induction of apoptotis in thymocytes in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Although DL cells or their products, such as DL-cell-conditioned medium or DL-cell-free ascitic fluid, could also induce apoptosis of thymocytes in vitro, the magnitude of the same was consistently lower than that induced by the serum of DL-bearing mice. Further, elucidation of the mechanism of apoptosis induction in thymocytes with respect to the involvement of apoptosis-related genes revealed that the death pathway followed an interleukin-1 beta-converting-enzyme-dependent, Fas-mediated apoptotic cascade, with a concomitant increase in the protein products of the bax, bad, p53, fas and fasL genes and cleavage of the 23-kD N-terminal fragment of
Bcl-2
that exhibited Bax-like death effector properties.
...
PMID:Ascitic growth of a spontaneous transplantable T cell lymphoma induces thymic involution. 2. Induction of apoptosis in thymocytes. 1100 72
Apocrine metaplasia is considered to be a benign lesion of human mammary epithelium. However, it is not known how apocrine differentiation develops, and whether there is a relationship with particular subtypes of mammary carcinoma. In order to investigate cell turnover in apocrine metaplasia, apoptosis was detected by terminal transferase nick-end-labelling, and Ki-67 was used as proliferation marker.
Bcl-2
, Bax, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), and c-erbB2-encoded protein were detected by immunohistochemistry. The proliferative activity was low (<1%). Frequency and intraepithelial localization of apoptotic cells resembled those of normal mammary epithelium. Bax immunostaining was inconstant and weak, and
Bcl-2
was not detectable in apocrine metaplasia. Immunoreactivity of the c-erbB2 gene product was
membrane-bound
and showed a moderate to strong intensity, whereas staining for EGFR was weak and inconsistent. When compared with normal breast epithelium, apocrine metaplasia shows a regular cell turnover at a low rate, although the expression patterns of regulatory proteins are clearly altered. Our data suggest that changes in the expression of
Bcl-2
or c-erbB2 protein do not result in a significant imbalance of apoptosis and proliferation, and thus should not be interpreted as indicator for increased risk of neoplastic transformation.
...
PMID:Cell turnover in apocrine metaplasia of the human mammary gland epithelium: apoptosis, proliferation, and immunohistochemical detection of Bcl-2, Bax, EGFR, and c-erbB2 gene products. 1125 28
The CD7(-) subset of CD4(+) T cells reflects a stable differentiation state of post-thymic helper T cells with CD45R0(+)CD45RA(-) 'memory' phenotype. Here we report that CD4(+)CD7(-) T cells are prone to increased spontaneous apoptosis in vitro compared to CD4(+)CD7(+) T cells. Spontaneous apoptosis is prevented by IL-15, but not by IL-2. Moreover, IL-15 increases
Bcl-2
and decreases CD95/Fas expression of CD7(-), but not of CD7(+) T cells. Because IL-15 is physiologically not secreted but expressed in a
membrane-bound
form, we cocultured T cells with TNF-alpha stimulated fibroblasts that expose membrane IL-15. TNF-alpha stimulated fibroblasts rescue CD4(+)CD7(-) T cells from apoptosis whereas unstimulated fibroblasts do not. Rescue from apoptosis requires cell-cell contact and is abolished by addition of neutralizing antibodies to IL-15. We conclude that membrane IL-15 prevents accelerated apoptosis of CD4(+)CD7(-) T cells. This mechanism may contribute to accumulation of CD7(-) T cells in chronic inflammatory skin lesions.
...
PMID:The CD7(-) subset of CD4(+) memory T cells is prone to accelerated apoptosis that is prevented by interleukin-15 (IL-15). 1155 91
Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of death worldwide. In recent years it has emerged that loss of myocardial cells may be a major pathogenic factor. Cell death can occur in a destructive, uncontrolled manner via necrosis or by a highly regulated programmed cell suicide mechanism termed apoptosis. As cell death in conditions such as heart failure and myocardial infarction does not always follow a typically apoptotic pathway, it remains to be established whether it occurs by apoptosis, necrosis, or a novel uncharacterized mechanism combining aspects of both types of cell death. Apoptotic pathways have been well studied in nonmyocytes and it is thought that similar pathways exist in cardiomyocytes. These pathways include death initiated by ligation of
membrane-bound
death receptors or death initiated by release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. Increasing evidence supports the existence of these pathways and their regulators in the heart. These regulators include inhibitors of caspases, which are the key enzymes of apoptosis, the
Bcl-2
family of proteins, growth factors, stress proteins, calcium, and oxidants. It is hoped that a better understanding of the pathways of apoptosis and their regulation may yield novel therapeutic targets for cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Losing heart: the role of apoptosis in heart disease--a novel therapeutic target? 1181 61
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