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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play an important role in cell death induced by many different stimuli. This study shows that hydrogen peroxide-induced apoptosis in T-cells did not require tyrosine kinase p561ck, phosphatase CD45, the CD95 receptor and its associated
Caspase-8
. H2O2-triggered cell death led to the induced cleavage and activation of Caspase-3. Hydrogen peroxide-treatment of T-cells resulted in the formation of mitochondrial permeability transition pores, a rapid decrease of the mitochondrial transmembrane potential delta psi(m) and the release of Cytochrome C. Inhibition of the mitochondrial permeability transition by bongkrekic acid (BA), or interference with the mitochondrial electron transport system by rotenone or menadione prevented the cytotoxic effect of H2O2. Antimycin A, a mitochondrial inhibitor that increases the release of mitochondrial ROS (MiROS), enhanced apoptosis. Overexpression of
Bcl-2
and the viral anti-apoptotic proteins BHRF-1 and E1B 19K counteracted H2O2-induced apoptosis. Pharmacological and genetic inhibition of transcription factor NF-kappaB protected cells from hydrogen peroxide-elicited cell death. This detrimental effect of NF-kappaB mediating hydrogen peroxide-induced cell death presumably relies on the induced expression of death effector genes such as p53, which was NF-kappaB-dependently upregulated in the presence of H2O2.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide-induced apoptosis is CD95-independent, requires the release of mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species and the activation of NF-kappaB. 998 25
Amplification of the MYCN gene is found in a large proportion of neuroblastoma and considered as an adverse prognostic factor. To investigate the effect of ectopic MycN expression on the susceptibility of neuroblastoma cells to cytotoxic drugs we used a human neuroblastoma cell line harboring tetracycline-controlled expression of MycN. Neither conditional expression of MycN alone nor low drug concentrations triggered apoptosis. However, when acting in concert, MycN and cytotoxic drugs efficiently induced cell death. Apoptosis depended on mitochondrial permeability transition and activation of caspases, since the mitochondrion-specific inhibitor bongkrekic acid and the caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk almost completely abrogated apoptosis. Loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential and release of cytochrome c from mitochondria preceded activation of
caspase-8
and caspase-3 and cleavage of PARP. CD95 expression was upregulated by treatment with cytotoxic drugs, while MycN cooperated with cytotoxic drugs to increase sensitivity to CD95-induced apoptosis and enhancing CD95-L expression. MycN overexpression and cytotoxic drugs also synergized to induce p53 and Bax protein expression, while
Bcl-2
and Bcl-X(L) protein levels remained unchanged. Since amplification of MYCN is usually associated with a poor prognosis, these findings suggest that dysfunctions in apoptosis pathways may be a mechanism by which MycN-induced apoptosis of neuroblastoma cells is inhibited.
...
PMID:MycN sensitizes neuroblastoma cells for drug-induced apoptosis. 1005 Aug 84
To evaluate the role of ceramide (Cer) in apoptosis signaling, we examined Cer formation induced by CD95, etoposide, or gamma-radiation (IR) in relation to caspase activation and mitochondrial changes in Jurkat T cells. The Cer response to all three stimuli was mapped in between caspases sensitive to benzoyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk) and acetyl-DEVD-aldehyde (DEVD-CHO). Cer production was independent of nuclear fragmentation but associated with the occurrence of other aspects of the apoptotic morphology.
Caspase-8
inhibition abrogated Cer formation and apoptosis induced by CD95 but did not affect the response to etoposide or IR, placing CD95-induced Cer formation downstream from
caspase-8
and excluding a role for
caspase-8
in the DNA damage pathways. CD95 signaling to the mitochondria required
caspase-8
, whereas cytochrome c release in response to DNA damage was caspase-independent. These results indicate that the caspases required for the Cer response to etoposide and IR reside at or downstream from the mitochondria.
Bcl-2
overexpression abrogated the Cer response to etoposide and IR and reduced CD95-induced Cer accumulation. We conclude that the Cer response to DNA damage fully depends on mitochondrion-dependent caspases, whereas the response to CD95 partially relies on these caspases. Our data imply that Cer is not instrumental in the activation of inducer caspases or signaling to the mitochondria. Rather, Cer formation is associated with the execution phase of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and mitochondrial changes during CD95- and DNA damage-induced apoptosis. 1019 69
We show here that
caspase-8
is required for the death of primary rat neurons induced by an expanded polyglutamine repeat (Q79). Expression of Q79 recruited and activated
caspase-8
. Inhibition of
caspase-8
blocked polyglutamine-induced cell death. Coexpression of Q79 with the caspase inhibitor CrmA, a dominant-negative mutant of FADD (FADD DN),
Bcl-2
, or Bcl-xL, but not an N-terminally tagged Bcl-xL, prevented the recruitment of
caspase-8
and inhibited polyglutamine-induced cell death. Furthermore, Western blot analysis revealed the presence of activated
caspase-8
in the insoluble fraction of affected brain regions from Huntington's disease (HD) patients but not in those from neurologically unremarkable controls, suggesting the relocation and activation of
caspase-8
during the pathogenesis of HD. These results suggest an essential role of
caspase-8
in HD-related neural degenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Caspase-8 is required for cell death induced by expanded polyglutamine repeats. 1019 20
Recent work suggests a participation of mitochondria in apoptotic cell death. This role includes the release of apoptogenic molecules into the cytosol preceding or after a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential DeltaPsim. The two uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) and 2, 4-dinitrophenol (DNP) reduce DeltaPsim by direct attack of the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane. Here we show that both compounds enhance the apoptosis-inducing capacity of Fas/APO-1/CD95 signaling in Jurkat and CEM cells without causing apoptotic changes on their own account. This amplification occurred upstream or at the level of caspases and was not inhibited by
Bcl-2
. The effect could be blocked by the cowpox protein CrmA and is thus likely to require
caspase 8
activity. Apoptosis induction by staurosporine in Jurkat cells as well as by Fas in SKW6 cells was unaffected by CCCP and DNP. The role of cytochrome c during Fas-DNP signaling was investigated. No early cytochrome c release from mitochondria was detected by Western blotting. Functional assays with cytoplasmic preparations from Fas-DNP-treated cells also indicated that there was no major contribution by cytochrome c or caspase 9 to the activation of effector caspases. Furthermore, an increase of rhodamine-123 uptake into intact cells, which has been explained by mitochondrial swelling, occurred considerably later than the caspase activation and was blocked by Z-VAD-fmk. These data show that uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation can presensitize some but not all cells for a Fas death signal and provide information about the existence of separate pathways in the induction of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation can enhance a Fas death signal. 1020 55
The death receptor CD95 (APO-1/Fas), the anticancer drug etoposide, and gamma-radiation induce apoptosis in the human T cell line Jurkat. Variant clones selected for resistance to CD95-induced apoptosis proved cross-resistant to etoposide- and radiation-induced apoptosis, suggesting that the apoptosis pathways induced by these distinct stimuli have critical component(s) in common. The pathways do not converge at the level of CD95 ligation or
caspase-8
signaling. Whereas
caspase-8
function was required for CD95-mediated cytochrome c release, effector caspase activation, and apoptosis, these responses were unaffected in etoposide-treated and irradiated cells when
caspase-8
was inhibited by FLIPL. Both effector caspase processing and cytochrome c release were inhibited in the resistant variant cells as well as in
Bcl-2
transfectants, suggesting that, in Jurkat cells, the apoptosis signaling pathways activated by CD95, etoposide, and gamma-radiation are under common mitochondrial control. All three stimuli induced ceramide production in wild-type cells, but not in resistant variant cells. Exogenous ceramide bypassed apoptosis resistance in the variant cells, but not in
Bcl-2
-transfected cells, suggesting that apoptosis signaling induced by CD95, etoposide, and gamma-radiation is subject to common regulation at a level different from that targeted by
Bcl-2
.
...
PMID:Common regulation of apoptosis signaling induced by CD95 and the DNA-damaging stimuli etoposide and gamma-radiation downstream from caspase-8 activation. 1031 46
We investigated the ability of caspases (cysteine proteases with aspartic acid specificity) to induce cytochrome c release from mitochondria. When Jurkat cells were induced to undergo apoptosis by Fas receptor ligation, cytochrome c was released from mitochondria, an event that was prevented by the caspase inhibitor, zVAD-fmk (zVal-Ala-Asp-CH2F). Purified
caspase-8
triggered rapid cytochrome c release from isolated mitochondria in vitro. The effect was indirect, as the presence of cytosol was required, suggesting that
caspase-8
cleaves and activates a cytosolic substrate, which in turn is able to induce cytochrome c release from mitochondria. The cytochrome c releasing activity was not blocked by caspase inhibition, but was antagonized by
Bcl-2
or Bcl-xL.
Caspase-8
and caspase-3 cleaved Bid, a proapoptotic
Bcl-2
family member, which gains cytochrome c releasing activity in response to caspase cleavage. However, caspase-6 and caspase-7 did not cleave Bid, although they initiated cytochrome c release from mitochondria in the presence of cytosol. Thus, effector caspases may cleave and activate another cytosolic substrate (other than Bid), which then promotes cytochrome c release from mitochondria. Mitochondria significantly amplified the
caspase-8
initiated DEVD-specific cleavage activity. Our data suggest that cytochrome c release, initiated by the action of caspases on a cytosolic substrates, may act to amplify a caspase cascade during apoptosis.
...
PMID:Caspases induce cytochrome c release from mitochondria by activating cytosolic factors. 1036 79
BID is a member of the BH3-only subgroup of
Bcl-2
family proteins that displays pro-apoptotic activity. The NH(2)-terminal region of BID contains a
caspase-8
(Casp-8) cleavage site and the cleaved form of BID translocates to mitochondrial membranes where it is a potent inducer of cytochrome c release. Secondary structure and fold predictions suggest that BID has a high degree of alpha-helical content and structural similarity to Bcl-X(L), which itself is highly similar to bacterial pore-forming toxins. Moreover, circular dichroism analysis confirmed a high alpha-helical content of BID. Amino-terminal truncated BIDDelta1-55, mimicking the Casp-8-cleaved molecule, formed channels in planar bilayers at neutral pH and in liposomes at acidic pH. In contrast, full-length BID displayed channel activity only at nonphysiological pH 4.0 (but not at neutral pH) in planar bilayers and failed to form channels in liposomes even under acidic conditions. On a single channel level, BIDDelta1-55 channels were voltage-gated and exhibited multiconductance behavior at neutral pH. When full-length BID was cleaved by Casp-8, it too demonstrated channel activity similar to that seen with BIDDelta1-55. Thus, BID appears to share structural and functional similarity with other
Bcl-2
family proteins known to have channel-forming activity, but its activity exhibits a novel form of activation: proteolytic cleavage.
...
PMID:Ion channel activity of the BH3 only Bcl-2 family member, BID. 1041 15
We have recently identified two different pathways of CD95-mediated apoptosis (Scaffidi, C., Fulda, S., Srinivasan, A., Feng, L., Friesen, C., Tomaselli, K. J., Debatin, K.-M., Krammer, P. H., and Peter, M. E. (1998) EMBO J. 17, 1675-1687). CD95-mediated apoptosis in type I cells is initiated by large amounts of active
caspase-8
formed at the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) followed by direct cleavage of caspase-3. In contrast, in type II cells very little DISC and small amounts of active
caspase-8
sufficient to induce the apoptogenic activity of mitochondria are formed causing a profound activation of both
caspase-8
and caspase-3. Only in type II cells can apoptosis be blocked by overexpressed
Bcl-2
or Bcl-x(L). We now show that a number of apoptosis-inhibiting or -inducing stimuli only affect apoptosis in type II cells, indicating that they act on the mitochondrial branch of the CD95 pathway. These stimuli include the activation of protein kinase C, which inhibits CD95-mediated apoptosis resulting in a delayed cleavage of BID, and the induction of apoptosis by the ceramide analog C(2)-ceramide. In addition, we have identified the CD95 high expressing cell line Boe(R) as a CD95 apoptosis-resistant type II cell that can be sensitized by treatment with cycloheximide without affecting formation of the DISC. This also places the effects of cycloheximide in the mitochondrial branch of the type II CD95 pathway. In contrast, c-FLIP was found to block CD95-mediated apoptosis in both type I and type II cells, because it acts directly at the DISC of both types of cells.
...
PMID:Differential modulation of apoptosis sensitivity in CD95 type I and type II cells. 1042 30
The effects of
Bcl-2
overexpression on several of its multifunctional characteristics, which include anti-apoptotic properties, impeding of cell proliferation, and telomerase activity, were examined in four Jurkat T cell clones overexpressing different levels of
Bcl-2
. When treated with anti-Fas or staurosporine, only three of the four clones showed resistance to apoptosis that correlated with the level of
Bcl-2
expression. Surprisingly, the clone having no anti-apoptotic characteristic expressed the highest level of
Bcl-2
. When all the clones were treated with anti-Fas the processing of caspase-2, -3, and -7 but not -8 was inhibited in the resistant clones to a similar extent by the differential overexpression of
Bcl-2
. However, with staurosporine treatment the processing of all the caspases examined was inhibited to a similar degree by the different levels of
Bcl-2
expression in the resistant clones. These results suggest that
Bcl-2
blocked Fas-mediated cell death by acting downstream of
caspase-8
, which is in contrast to staurosporine-induced apoptosis where
Bcl-2
is acting upstream of
caspase-8
. When the anti-proliferative effect of
Bcl-2
was examined, a direct correlation between a decrease in cell proliferation and the level of
Bcl-2
overexpressed in the clones was observed. The clone overexpressing the greatest amount of
Bcl-2
protein, which had no resistance to apoptosis, had the slowest proliferative rate. This suggests that the anti-apoptotic effect of
Bcl-2
can be separated from its anti-proliferative effect. The possible effect of overexpression of
Bcl-2
on telomerase activity, which is known to control the proliferative capacity of normal cells and cellular senescence, was also determined. Our results suggest that
Bcl-2
had no effect on telomerase activity or telomere length in the clones. In summary, our results further suggest that some properties of
Bcl-2
, such as anti-apoptotic and inhibition of cell proliferation, are individual features of a multifaceted protein.
...
PMID:Effects of differential overexpression of Bcl-2 on apoptosis, proliferation, and telomerase activity in Jurkat T cells. 1043 83
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