Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The in vivo patterns of CPP32 (
Caspase-3
) gene expression were determined using an immunohistochemical approach and paraffin-embedded normal human tissues. A rabbit polyclonal antiserum was generated against recombinant human CPP32 protein and shown to be specific by immunoblot analysis of various human tissues and cell lines. CPP32 immunoreactivity was selectively found in certain cell types and was typically present within the cytosol, although occasional cells also contained nuclear immunostaining. CPP32 immunostaining was easily detected, for example, in epidermal keratinocyes, cartilage chondrocytes, bone osteocytes, heart myocardiocytes, vascular smooth muscle cells, bronchial epithelium, hepatocytes, thymocytes, plasma cells, renal tubule epithelium, spermatogonia, prostatic secretory epithelial cells, uterine endometrium and myometrium, mammary ductal epithelial cells, and the gastrointestinal epithelium of the stomach, intestine, and colon. In contrast, little or no CPP32 immunoreactivity was observed in endothelial cells, alveolar pneumocytes, kidney glomeruli, mammary myoepithelial cells, Schwann cells, and most types of brain and spinal cord neurons. Consistent with a role for CPP32 in apoptotic cell death, clear differences in the relative intensity of CPP32 immunostaining were noted in some shorter-lived types of cells compared to longer-lived, including (a) germinal center (high) versus mantle zone (low) B lymphocytes within the secondary follicles of lymph nodes, spleen, and tonsils; (b) mature neutrophils (high) versus myeloid progenitor cells (low) in bone marrow; (c) corpus luteal cells (high) versus follicular granulosa cells (low) in the ovary; and (d) prostate secretory epithelial cells (high) versus basal cells (low). These findings establish for the first time the cell type- and differentiation-specific patterns of expression of an interleukin-1beta converting enzyme/CED-3 (Caspase) family protease.
Cancer
Res 1997 Apr 15
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of in vivo patterns of expression of CPP32 (Caspase-3), a cell death protease. 910 67
Immunohistochemical analysis of the apoptosis-effector protease CPP32 (
Caspase-3
) in normal lymph nodes, tonsils, and nodes affected with reactive hyperplasia (n = 22) showed strong immunoreactivity in the apoptosis-prone germinal center B-lymphocytes of secondary follicles, but little or no reactivity in the surrounding long-lived mantle zone lymphocytes. Immunoblot analysis of fluorescence-activated cell sorted germinal center and mantle zone B cells supported the immunohistochemical results. In 22 of 27 (81%) follicular small cleaved cell non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphomas, the CPP32-immunopositive germinal center lymphocytes were replaced by CPP32-negative tumor cells. In contrast, the large cell component of follicular mixed cells (FMs) and follicular large cell lymphomas (FLCLs) was strongly CPP32 immunopositive in 12 of 17 (71%) and in 8 of 14 (57%) cases, respectively, whereas the residual small-cleaved cells were poorly stained for CPP32 in all FLCLs and in 12 of 17 (71%) FMs, suggesting that an upregulation of CPP32 immunoreactivity occurred during progression. Similarly, cytosolic immunostaining for CPP32 was present in 10 of 12 (83%) diffuse large cell lymphomas (DLCLs) and 2 of 3 diffuse mixed B-cell lymphomas (DMs). Immunopositivity for CPP32 was also found in the majority of other types of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas studied. Plasmacytomas were CPP32 immunonegative in 4 of 12 (33%) cases, in contrast to normal plasma cells, which uniformly contained intense CPP32 immunoreactivity, implying downregulation of CPP32 in a subset of these
malignancies
. All 12 peripheral blood B-cell chronic lymphocyte leukemia specimens examined were CPP32 immunopositive, whereas 3 of 3 small lymphocytic lymphomas were CPP32 negative, suggesting that CPP32 expression may vary depending on the tissue compartment in which these neoplastic B cells reside. The results show dynamic regulation of CPP32 expression in normal and malignant lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization of the ICE/Ced-3-family protease, CPP32 (Caspase-3), in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, chronic lymphocytic leukemias, and reactive lymph nodes. 916 Jun 89
In many cell types, the p53 tumor suppressor protein is required for the induction of apoptosis by DNA-damaging chemotherapy or radiation. Therefore, identification of the molecular determinants of p53-dependent cell death may aid in the design of effective therapies of p53-deficient cancers. We investigated whether p53-dependent apoptosis requires activation of CPP32beta (
caspase 3
), a cysteine protease that has been found to mediate apoptosis in response to ligation of the Fas molecule or to granzyme B, a component of CTL lytic granules. Irradiation-induced apoptosis was associated with p53-dependent activation of CPP32beta-related proteolysis, and normal thymocytes were protected from irradiation by Acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-CHO (Ac-DEVD-CHO), a specific inhibitor of CPP32beta. We next examined whether the Fas system is required for p53-dependent apoptosis and whether stimuli that induce activation of CPP32beta induce apoptosis in p53-deficient cells. Thymocytes or activated T cells from Fas-deficient mice were resistant to apoptosis induced by ligation of Fas or CD3, respectively, but remained normally susceptible to irradiation. Thymocytes from p53-deficient mice, although resistant to DNA damage, remained sensitive to CPP32beta-mediated apoptosis induced by ligation of Fas or CD3, or by exposure to cytotoxic T cells. These results demonstrate that DNA damage-induced apoptosis of T cells requires p53-mediated activation of CPP32beta by a mechanism independent of Fas/FasL interactions and suggest that immunological or molecular methods of activating CPP32beta may be effective at inducing apoptosis in p53-deficient cancers that are resistant to conventional chemotherapy or irradiation.
Cancer
Res 1997 Jul 01
PMID:p53-dependent DNA damage-induced apoptosis requires Fas/APO-1-independent activation of CPP32beta. 920 51
High-dose Ara-C (HIDAC) induces the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
(CPP32beta/Yama/apopain), resulting in the morphological and biochemical features of apoptosis. High levels of the antiapoptotic Bcl-x(L) or Bcl-2, relative to the proapoptotic Bax, have been shown to inhibit HIDAC-induced cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
and apoptosis of the human acute myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells. In a previous report, we demonstrated this inhibition, using the control HL-60 (HL-60/neo) cells and their counterparts, HL-60/Bcl-x(L), which have enforced overexpression of Bcl-x(L) and a significantly lower ratio of free to bound Bax. Results of the present studies demonstrate that, in the initiation phase of apoptosis of HL-60/neo cells due to HIDAC (10 or 100 microM for 4 h), cytochrome c is released from the mitochondria to the cytosol, followed by the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsi m) and an increase in the reactive oxygen species; these events precede and trigger the cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
. These HIDAC-induced early mitochondrial and cytosolic perturbations, which represent the initiation phase of HIDAC-induced apoptosis, were inhibited in HL-60/Bcl-x(L) cells. HIDAC treatment for 4 h also modestly increased the intracellular levels of free Bax relative to Bax bound to Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L) in HL-60/neo but not in HL-60/Bcl-x(L) cells. In HL-60/neo cells, HIDAC-induced progressive accumulation of cytochrome c in the cytosol, the decrease in deltapsi m, and the increase in reactive oxygen species were not inhibited by coculture with the tetrapeptide inhibitors of caspases that have been previously shown to inhibit Ara-C-induced cleavage and activity of
caspase-3
and apoptosis. These findings indicate that Bcl-x(L) inhibits HIDAC-induced preapoptotic mitochondrial perturbations, which prevent the accumulation of cytochrome c in the cytosol, thereby preserving
caspase-3
in the inactive zymogen state and checking the molecular cascade of apoptosis.
Cancer
Res 1997 Aug 01
PMID:Overexpression of Bcl-X(L) inhibits Ara-C-induced mitochondrial loss of cytochrome c and other perturbations that activate the molecular cascade of apoptosis. 924 35
The induction of apoptosis of tumor cells by the colonic fermentation product butyrate is thought to be an important mechanism in protection against colorectal cancer. Because a major action of butyrate is to inhibit histone deacetylase (leading to chromatin relaxation and altered gene expression), butyrate may induce apoptosis by derepression of specific cell death genes. Here we show that butyrate and trichostatin A (a more selective inhibitor of histone deacetylase) induce the same program of apoptosis in Jurkat lymphoid and LIM 1215 colorectal cancer cell lines that is strictly dependent on new protein synthesis (within 10 h) and that leads to the conversion of the proenzyme form of
caspase-3
to the catalytically active effector protease (within 16 h) and apoptotic death (within 24 h). Cells primed with a low concentration of butyrate that itself did not induce activation of
caspase-3
or apoptosis were, nevertheless, rendered highly susceptible to induction of apoptosis by staurosporine (an agent that has recently been shown to act by causing mitochondrial release of cytochrome c). Synergy between butyrate and staurosporine was due to the presence of a factor in the cytosol of butyrate-primed cells which enhanced over 7-fold the activation of
caspase-3
induced by the addition of cytochrome c and dATP to isolated cytosol. We propose that changes at the level of chromatin structure, induced by a physiological substance butyrate, lead to the expression of a protein that facilitates the pathway by which mitochondria activate
caspase-3
and trigger apoptotic death of lymphoid and colorectal cancer cells.
Cancer
Res 1997 Sep 01
PMID:Induction of caspase-3 protease activity and apoptosis by butyrate and trichostatin A (inhibitors of histone deacetylase): dependence on protein synthesis and synergy with a mitochondrial/cytochrome c-dependent pathway. 928 76
Betulinic acid (BA), a melanoma-specific cytotoxic agent, induced apoptosis in neuroectodermal tumors, such as neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, and Ewing's sarcoma, representing the most common solid tumors of childhood. BA triggered an apoptosis pathway different from the one previously identified for standard chemotherapeutic drugs. BA-induced apoptosis was independent of CD95-ligand/receptor interaction and accumulation of wild-type p53 protein, but it critically depended on activation of caspases (interleukin 1beta-converting enzyme/Ced-3-like proteases). FLICE/MACH (caspase-8), considered to be an upstream protease in the caspase cascade, and the downstream caspase CPP32/YAMA/
Apopain
(caspase-3) were activated, resulting in cleavage of the prototype substrate of caspases PARP. The broad-spectrum peptide inhibitor benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone, which blocked cleavage of FLICE and PARP, also completely abrogated BA-triggered apoptosis. Cleavage of caspases was preceded by disturbance of mitochondrial membrane potential and by generation of reactive oxygen species. Overexpression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL conferred resistance to BA at the level of mitochondrial dysfunction, protease activation, and nuclear fragmentation. This suggested that mitochondrial alterations were involved in BA-induced activation of caspases. Furthermore, Bax and Bcl-xs, two death-promoting proteins of the Bcl-2 family, were up-regulated following BA treatment. Most importantly, neuroblastoma cells resistant to CD95- and doxorubicin-mediated apoptosis were sensitive to treatment with BA, suggesting that BA may bypass some forms of drug resistance. Because BA exhibited significant antitumor activity on patients' derived neuroblastoma cells ex vivo, BA may be a promising new agent for the treatment of neuroectodermal tumors in vivo.
Cancer
Res 1997 Nov 01
PMID:Betulinic acid triggers CD95 (APO-1/Fas)- and p53-independent apoptosis via activation of caspases in neuroectodermal tumors. 986 49
The ability of cryptophycin 1, a new potent cytotoxic antimicrotubule agent, to initiate apoptosis was studied. Treatment of cells with cryptophycin 1 (50 pM) rapidly caused morphological changes consistent with the induction of apoptosis. DNA strand breakage and fragmentation of the DNA into oligonucleosome-sized fragments was observed, and this coincided with the loss of cellular DNA. Activation of the
cysteine protease CPP32
(
caspase 3
, YAMA, apopain), a member of the ICE/CED-3-like protease family of apoptosis effectors, was consistent with the execution of cell death by a coordinated sequence of events. Low concentrations of cryptophycin 1 caused mitotic arrest with the formation of abnormal mitotic spindles without affecting interphase microtubule structures. Unlike other microtubule active agents, cryptophycin-induced mitotic arrest persisted for only a brief period before the onset of apoptosis. There was no evidence of release from G2/M cell cycle arrest. Our results show that low concentrations of cryptophycin 1 (50 pM) initiated cell death consistent with apoptosis. These data suggest that the cytotoxic effects of cryptophycin 1 are due in part to its ability to initiate apoptosis rapidly.
Int J
Cancer
1997 Nov 04
PMID:Induction of apoptosis by cryptophycin 1, a new antimicrotubule agent. 935 93
The goals of this work were to establish a reproducible and effective model of apoptosis in a cell line derived from advanced prostate cancer and to study the role of the caspase family of proteases in mediating apoptosis in this system. The study involved the use of the prostate cancer cell line LNCaP. Apoptosis was induced using the hydroxymethyl glutaryl CoA reductase inhibitor, lovastatin, and was evaluated by agarose gel electrophoresis of genomic DNA, morphological criteria, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling. Caspases were studied by catalytic activity, mRNA induction, and protein processing. Lovastatin (30 microM) was an effective inducer of apoptosis, causing changes that were evident after 48 h and essentially complete after 96-120 h of treatment. These effects were prevented by the simultaneous addition of mevalonate (300 microM) to the culture medium. Lovastatin induced a proteolytic activity that was able to cleave the enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and the substrate Z-DEVD-AFC, which is modeled after the P1-P4 amino acids of the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage site. Caspase-7, but not
caspase-3
, underwent proteolytic activation during lovastatin-induced apoptosis, an effect prevented by mevalonate. Caspase-7 was the only detected interleukin 1beta converting enzyme family protease with DEVD cleavage activity that exhibited lovastatin-induced mRNA up-regulation. Again, mevalonate blocked this effect. Lovastatin-induced apoptosis also was prevented when the caspase inhibitors Z-DEVD-CH2F or Z-VAD-CH2F (100 microM) where added to the medium. These studies have identified lovastatin as a powerful inducer of apoptosis in the cell line LNCaP. Caspase activation was a necessary event for LNCaP cells to undergo apoptosis during treatment with lovastatin. Of the caspases tested, only caspase-7 underwent proteolytic activation after stimulation with lovastatin. Identification of caspase-7 as a potential mediator of lovastatin-induced apoptosis broadens our knowledge of the molecular events associated with programmed cell death in a cell line derived from prostatic epithelium.
Cancer
Res 1998 Jan 01
PMID:Caspase-7 is activated during lovastatin-induced apoptosis of the prostate cancer cell line LNCaP. 942 61
In our previous studies (S. Simizu, et al., 1996,
Cancer
Res. 56, 4978-4982), we reported that apoptosis of human small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) cells induced by protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as erbstatin and herbimycin A, was mediated by H2O2 via a newly synthesized protein(s). In the present study, we demonstrated that induction of apoptosis by erbstatin resulted in activation of
caspase-3
(-like) proteases, which are interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme family proteases (caspases) and that inhibition of these protease activities reduced the extent of cell death and H2O2 generation. We also demonstrated that expression of apoptotic protein Bax was induced by erbstatin. Erbstatin-induced Bax expression was inhibited by the inhibitor of
caspase-3
(-like) proteases. These results indicate that generation of intracellular H2O2 and Bax expression in tyrosine kinase inhibitor-induced apoptosis were modulated by the activation of
caspase-3
(-like) proteases in SCLC cells.
...
PMID:Induction of hydrogen peroxide production and Bax expression by caspase-3(-like) proteases in tyrosine kinase inhibitor-induced apoptosis in human small cell lung carcinoma cells. 945 72
Isothiocyanates exert strong anticarcinogenic effects in a number of animal models of
cancer
, presumably by modulation of xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes, such as by inhibition of cytochrome P-450 and/or by induction of phase II detoxifying enzymes. Here, we report that phenethyl isothiocyanate and other structurally related isothiocyanates, phenylmethyl isothiocyanate, phenylbutyl isothiocyanate, and phenylhexyl isothiocyanate, but not phenyl isothiocyanate induced apoptosis in HeLa cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Treatment with apoptosis-inducing concentrations of isothiocyanates also caused rapid and transient induction of
caspase-3
/CPP32-like activity. Furthermore, these isothiocyanates, except phenyl isothiocyanate, stimulated proteolytic cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, which followed the appearance of caspase activity and preceded DNA fragmentation. Pretreatment with a potent
caspase-3
inhibitor acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde inhibited isothiocyanate-induced
caspase-3
-like activity and apoptosis. These results suggest that isothiocyanates may induce apoptosis through a
caspase-3
-dependent mechanism. The induction of apoptosis by isothiocyanates may provide a distinct mechanism for their chemopreventive functions.
Cancer
Res 1998 Feb 01
PMID:Chemopreventive isothiocyanates induce apoptosis and caspase-3-like protease activity. 945 80
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>