Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (caspase-3)
45,978 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anthocyanidins are the aglycon nucleuses of anthocyanins, which are reddish pigments widely spread in colored fruits and vegetables. To investigate their anti-cancer effect, induction of apoptosis was tested in human promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60), which is a valid model for testing antileukemic or general antitumoral compounds. Of six anthocyanidins representing the aglycons of most of anthocyanins, only those with an ortho-dihydroxyphenyl structure on the B-ring induce apoptosis, suggesting that the ortho-dihydroxyphenyl structure of anthocyanidins may contribute to the induction of apoptosis. Delphinidin, the most potent inducer, causes apoptosis in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The efficacious induction of apoptosis was observed at 100 micro M for 6 h. Concomitant with the apoptosis, delphinidin stimulates JNK pathway activation including JNK phosphorylation and c-jun gene expression, and activates caspase-3. Antioxidants including N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) and catalase effectively block delphinidin-induced JNK phosphorylation, caspase-3 activation, and DNA fragmentation. Moreover, anthocyanidins directly cause HL-60 cells to generate intracellular hydrogen peroxide. Thus, anthocyanidins may trigger an apoptotic death program through an oxidative stress-involved JNK signaling pathway. The induction of apoptosis by anthocyanins may be the pivotal mechanism by which its chemopreventive action against cancer is based.
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PMID:Anthocyanidins induce apoptosis in human promyelocytic leukemia cells: structure-activity relationship and mechanisms involved. 1288 7

Assessment of specific apoptosis and survival pathways implicated in anticancer drug action is important for understanding drug mechanisms and modes of resistance in order to improve the benefits of chemotherapy. In order to better examine the role of mitogen-activated protein kinases, including JNK and ERK, as well as the tumor suppressor p53, in the response of tumor cells to chemotherapy, we compared the effects on these pathways of three structurally and functionally distinct antitumor agents. Drug concentrations equal to 50 times the concentration required to reduce cell proliferation by 50% were used. Vinblastine, doxorubicin, or etoposide (VP-16) induced apoptotic cell death in KB-3 carcinoma cells, with similar kinetic profiles of PARP cleavage, caspase 3 activation, and mitochondrial cytochrome c release. All three drugs strongly activated JNK, but only vinblastine induced c-Jun phosphorylation and AP-1 activation. Inhibition of JNK by SP600125 protected cells from drug-induced cytotoxicity. Vinblastine caused inactivation of ERK whereas ERK was unaffected in cells exposed to doxorubicin or VP-16. Inhibition of ERK signaling by the MEK inhibitor, U0126, potentiated the cytotoxic effects of vinblastine and doxorubicin, but not that of VP-16. Vinblastine induced p53 downregulation, and chemical inhibition of p53 potentiated vinblastine-induced cell death, suggesting a protective effect of p53. In contrast, doxorubicin and VP-16 induced p53, and inhibition of p53 decreased drug-induced cell death, suggesting a pro-apoptotic role for p53. These results highlight the differential roles played by several key signal transduction pathways in the mechanisms of action of key antitumor agents, and suggest ways to specifically potentiate their effects in a context-dependent manner. In addition, the novel finding that JNK activation can occur without c-Jun phosphorylation or AP-1 activation has important implications for our understanding of JNK function.
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PMID:The JNK, ERK and p53 pathways play distinct roles in apoptosis mediated by the antitumor agents vinblastine, doxorubicin, and etoposide. 1290 45

Improving the ability of the kidney to tolerate ischemic injury has important implications. We investigated the effect of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) treatment on subsequent ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury and evaluated the role of heat shock protein (HSP) 70 in rHuEPO-induced renal protection. rHuEPO (3000 U/kg) was administered 24 h before I/R injury, and rats were killed at 24, 48, and 72 h after I/R injury. Pretreatment of rHuEPO resulted in the following: i) decreased serum creatinine level; ii) decreased tubular cell apoptosis and necrosis, measured by DNA fragmentation analysis and TUNEL staining and histomorphological criteria; iii) decreased tubular cell proliferation as determined by proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression; iv) increased bcl-2 protein and decreased caspase 3 activity; and v) decreased JNK expression. rHuEPO treatment increased HSP70 expression in a dose-dependent manner in normal rat kidneys, and inhibition of HSP70 expression by quercetin eliminated the renoprotective effect of rHuEPO in ischemic kidneys. Our study demonstrates that rHuEPO has a protective effect on subsequent I/R injury and that this effect is associated with induction of HSP70. Our study provides a new avenue for therapy to prevent renal damage after I/R injury.
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PMID:Preconditioning with erythropoietin protects against subsequent ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat kidney. 1295 99

The human leukemic T-cell line Jurkat was used to define the role of the cellular stress pathway with its key player kinase JNK in cancer therapy-induced apoptosis. JNK activity was inhibited by stable transfection with a dominant negative mutant of the upstream kinase JNKK/MKK4 or with the novel, potent and selective JNK1, -2 and -3 inhibitor SP600125. Inhibition of JNK activity delayed the onset of apoptosis induced by cisplatin, doxorubicin, gamma-irradiation and CD95-L but did not prevent apoptosis per se. Early events during apoptosis such as induction of CD95-L, activation of caspase-8 and exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface were strongly inhibited. Also, at early time points of apoptosis, loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential and release of cytochrome c were markedly impaired. However, late signaling events during apoptosis such as cleavage of PARP and DNA fragmentation apoptosis were only marginally affected. These findings are in accordance with the activity of initiator and effector caspases. Whereas activity of the initiator caspase-8 was strongly inhibited early and late after induction, an inhibition of caspase-3 activity was only observed early after induction of apoptosis. We therefore suggest that cellular stress signaling contributes to the initiation of apoptosis, whereas it might be dispensable for the progression of apoptosis. Dysfunction of this pathway under pathological conditions might contribute to therapy resistance of cancer cells.
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PMID:Inhibition of JNK signaling diminishes early but not late cellular stress-induced apoptosis. 1452 Jun 87

The pharmacological properties of garlic and its derivatives are long known, and their underling mechanisms are being extensively investigated. In this study we have addressed the effects of diallyl disulfide (DADS), an oil-soluble garlic molecule, on cell growth of neuroblastoma cell SH-SY5Y, focusing on the redox events associated with this compound. Treatment of SH-SY5Y cells with DADS resulted in arrest of cell cycle in G(2)/M phase and commitment to apoptosis through the activation of the mitochondrial pathway (Bcl-2 down-regulation, cytochrome c release into the cytosol, and activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3). The earliest oxidative event observed after DADS treatment was the increase of production of reactive oxygen species, which reached the maximum yield on 30 min of DADS treatment. The oxidative burst resulted in protein and lipid damage as demonstrated by protein carbonyl accumulation and lipid peroxidation. We demonstrated that apoptosis induction was highly dependent on the activation of the redox-sensitive c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK)/c-Jun pathway. In particular, we established that DADS treatment induces JNK dissociation from glutathione S-transferase and its activation by phosphorylation. Moreover, treatment with JNK inhibitor I significantly reduced DADS-induced apoptosis and treatment with the spin trap 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide or overexpression of the antioxidant enzyme copper, zinc superoxide dismutase, resulted in the inhibition of DADS-mediated toxicity through attenuation of JNK/c-Jun pathway activation. Overall, the results suggest a pivotal role for oxidative stress in DADS-induced apoptosis and, taking into account that tumor cells are deficient in antioxidants, suggest a plausible utilization of this compound as an antiproliferative agent in cancer therapy.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen species-dependent c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase/c-Jun signaling cascade mediates neuroblastoma cell death induced by diallyl disulfide. 1452 20

Fibrillogenic human amylin elicits pancreatic beta-cell apoptosis that may contribute to development of type-2 diabetes. Here, we demonstrated that activation of a caspase cascade is necessary for induction of apoptosis by fibrillogenic amylin variants in two pancreatic beta-cell lines. Human amylin, as well as truncated 8-37human amylin, evoked sequential activation of caspases-8 and -3, and apoptosis, whereas non-beta-sheet forming and non-fibrillogenic homologs, such as [25,28,29triprolyl]human amylin, did not, implying that the beta-sheet conformer is required for human amylin-induced caspase activation. Significant inhibition of apoptosis was evoked by a selective caspase-1 inhibitor, indicating that caspase-1 is also essential for activation of the caspase cascade. Furthermore, we showed that specific jnk1 antisense oligonucleotides, which suppress phospho-JNK1 expression, effectively decreased human amylin-induced activation of c-Jun. Studies of the interplay between the caspase cascade and the JNK pathway showed that both apoptosis and caspase-3 activation were suppressed by treatment with a JNK inhibitor and by transfection of antisense jnk1 oligonucleotides or antisense-c-jun, whereas a selective inhibitor of caspases-1 and -3 prevented apoptosis but not c-Jun activation. Thus, the JNK1 activation preceded activation of caspases-1 and -3. However, selective JNK inhibition had no effect on caspase-8 activation, and selective caspase-8 inhibition only partially suppressed apoptosis and c-Jun activation, indicating that caspase-8 may partially act upstream of the JNK pathway. Our studies demonstrate a functional interaction of a caspase cascade and JNK1. Fibrillogenic amylin can evoke a JNK1-mediated apoptotic pathway, which is partially dependent and partially independent of caspase-8, and in which caspase-3 acts as a common downstream effector.
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PMID:Fibrillogenic amylin evokes islet beta-cell apoptosis through linked activation of a caspase cascade and JNK1. 1453 96

Cell injury and cell death of pulmonary epithelium plays an important role in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury in animals exposed to prolonged hyperoxia. The aim of this study was to decipher the molecular mechanisms modulating cell death induced by hyperoxia in lung epithelium. Cell death is thought to be either apoptotic, with shrinking phenotypes and activated caspases, or oncotic, with swelling organelles. Exposure to 95% O2 (hyperoxia) induced cell death of MLE-12 cells with cellular as well as nuclear swelling, cytosolic vacuolation, and loss of mitochondrial structure and enzyme function. Neither elevated caspase-3 activity nor phosphatidylserine translocation were detected, suggesting that in hyperoxia, MLE-12 cells die via oncosis rather than apoptosis. In addition, hyperoxia triggered a sustained activation of the transcription factor AP-1, as well as mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family members p38 and JNK. Importantly, survival of MLE-12 cells in hyperoxia was significantly enhanced when either AP-1, p38, or JNK activation was inhibited by either specific inhibitors or dominant negative DNA constructs, indicating that in lung epithelial cells hyperoxia induces a program-driven oncosis, involving AP-1, JNK, and p38 MAPK. Interestingly, hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative apoptosis of MLE-12 cells, with a shrinking nuclear morphology and activated caspase-3 activity, is also mediated by AP-1, JNK, and p38. Therefore, our data indicate that although they have divergent downstream events, oxidative oncosis and apoptosis share upstream JNK/p38 and AP-1 pathways, which could be used as potential targets for reducing hyperoxic inflammatory lung injury.
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PMID:MAPK pathways mediate hyperoxia-induced oncotic cell death in lung epithelial cells. 1455 62

It has been documented that polyamines play a critical role in the regulation of apoptosis in intestinal epithelial cells. We have recently reported that protection from TNF-alpha/cycloheximide (CHX)-induced apoptosis in epithelial cells depleted of polyamines is mediated through the inactivation of a proapoptotic mediator, JNK. In this study, we addressed the involvement of the MAPK pathway in the regulation of apoptosis after polyamine depletion of IEC-6 cells. Polyamine depletion by alpha-difluromethylornithine (DFMO) resulted in the sustained activation of ERK in response to TNF-alpha/CHX treatment. Pretreatment of polyamine-depleted IEC-6 cells with a cell membrane-permeable MEK1/2 inhibitor, U-0126, significantly inhibited TNF-alpha/CHX-induced ERK phosphorylation and significantly increased DNA fragmentation, JNK activity, and caspase-3 activity in response to TNF-alpha/CHX. Moreover, the dose dependency of U-0126-mediated inhibition of TNF-alpha/ CHX-induced ERK phosphorylation correlated with the reversal of the antiapoptotic effect of DFMO. IEC-6 cells expressing constitutively active MEK1 had decreased TNF-alpha/CHX-induced JNK phosphorylation and were significantly protected from apoptosis. Conversely, a dominant-negative MEK1 resulted in high basal activation of JNK, cytochrome c release, and spontaneous apoptosis. Polyamine depletion of the dominant-negative MEK1 cells did not prevent JNK activation or cytochrome c release and failed to confer protection from both TNF-alpha/CHX and camptothecin-induced apoptosis. Finally, expression of a dominant-negative mutant of JNK significantly protected IEC-6 cells from TNF-alpha/CHX-induced apoptosis. These data indicate that polyamine depletion results in the activation of ERK, which inhibits JNK activation and protects cells from apoptosis.
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PMID:Prevention of TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis in polyamine-depleted IEC-6 cells is mediated through the activation of ERK1/2. 1456 73

Serum starvation has recently been shown to cause cell death of cardiac fibroblasts and increased synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins in the surviving cells. In the present study, events occurring in the dying cells were investigated. Cultured adult rat cardiac fibroblasts were exposed to serum-free medium. Cell number was measured using a Coulter Counter Channelyzer. The activity of the extracellular signal-regulated or mitogen-activated protein kinases (ERK1/2, p42/p44(MAPK)), the p38 kinase (p38(MAPK)), the c-Jun N-terminal kinases (p46/p54(JNK)), and Akt kinase was assessed by Western blotting and phospho-specific antibodies. Caspase 7-cleavage was investigated by Western blotting and specific antibodies. Caspase 3 activity was measured by detection of its cleaved substrate. The appearance of necrosis was studied by inclusion of trypan blue. Apoptosis was assessed by DNA ladder formation. The mRNA expression of Bax and Bcl-2 was investigated by quantitative real-time PCR. Serum withdrawal led to the death of 26% of cultured isolated cardiac fibroblasts during the first 5 h. The activity of the p42/ p44(MAPK) as well as of Akt kinase was partially reduced. For p46/p54(JNK) and p38(MAPK), elevated phosphorylation was measured. Inhibition of p46/p54(JNK) and p38(MAPK) activity by SB202190 did not affect the decrease in cell number. Cleavage of caspase 7 was detected after 90 min. However, no activation of caspase 3 was measured. DNA fragmentation was not found after serum depletion. Trypan blue staining, however, was observed in 16% of the cells after 5 h. The mRNA levels of both Bax and Bcl-2 were increased after 30 min. These results indicate the appearance of necrosis during serum starvation in cardiac fibroblasts. However, some processes typical of apoptosis were also detected.
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PMID:Mechanism of cell death of rat cardiac fibroblasts induced by serum depletion. 1457 13

Epidemiological and experimental carcinogenesis studies provide evidence that components of garlic (Allium sativum) have anticancer activity. We recently reported that the garlic derivative S-allylmercaptocysteine (SAMC) inhibits growth, arrests cells in G(2)-M, and induces apoptosis in human colon cancer cells (Shirin et al., Cancer Res., 61: 725-731, 2001). Because a fraction of the SAMC-treated cells are specifically arrested in mitosis, we examined the mechanism of this effect in the present study. Immunofluorescent microscopy revealed that the treatment of SW480 cells or NIH3T3 fibroblasts with 150 micro M SAMC (the IC(50) concentration) caused rapid microtubule (MT) depolymerization, MT cytoskeleton disruption, centrosome fragmentation and Golgi dispersion in interphase cells. It also induced the formation of monopolar and multipolar spindles in mitotic cells. In vitro turbidity assays indicated that SAMC acted directly on tubulin to cause MT depolymerization, apparently because it interacts with -SH groups on tubulin. To investigate the signaling pathways involved in SAMC-induced apoptosis, we assayed c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) activity and found that treatment with SAMC caused a rapid and sustained induction of JNK activity. The selective JNK inhibitor SP600125 inhibited the early phase (24 h) but not the late phase (48 h and later) of apoptosis induced by SAMC. Expression of a dominant-negative mutant of JNK1 in SW480 cells inhibited apoptosis induced by SAMC at 24 h but had no protective effect at 48 h. JNK1(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts were resistant to SAMC-induced apoptosis at 24 h but not at 48 h. On the other hand, the inhibition or abrogation of JNK1 activity did not inhibit the G(2)-M arrest induced by SAMC. SAMC also activated caspase-3. The general caspase inhibitor z-VAD-fmk inhibited both early and late phases of apoptosis induced by SAMC. We conclude that the garlic-derived compound SAMC exerts antiproliferative effects by binding directly to tubulin and disrupting the MT assembly, thus arresting cells in mitosis and triggering JNK1 and caspase-3 signaling pathways that lead to apoptosis.
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PMID:Induction of apoptosis by the garlic-derived compound S-allylmercaptocysteine (SAMC) is associated with microtubule depolymerization and c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase 1 activation. 1458 80


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