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)

Although the available evidence suggests that whereas the caspase family plays a major role in apoptosis, they are not the sole stimulators of death. A random yeast two-hybrid screen of a lymphocyte cDNA library (using caspase-3 as the bait) found an interaction between caspase-3 and the regulatory subunit Aalpha of protein phosphatase 2A. This protein was found to be a substrate for caspase-3, but not caspase-1, and could compete effectively against either a protein or synthetic peptide substrate. In Jurkat cells induced to undergo apoptosis with anti-Fas antibody, protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity increased 4.5-fold after 6 h. By 12 h, the regulatory Aalpha subunit could no longer be detected in cell lysates. There was no change in the amount of the catalytic subunit. The effects on PP2A could be prevented by the caspase family inhibitors acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp (DEVD) aldehyde or Ac-DEVD fluoromethyl ketone. The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway is regulated by PP2A. At 12 h after the addition of anti-Fas antibody, a decrease in the amount of the phosphorylated forms of MAP kinase was observed. Again, this loss of activated MAP kinase could be prevented by the addition of DEVD-cho or DEVD-fmk. These data are consistent with a pathway whereby induction of apoptosis activates caspase-3. This enzyme then cleaves the regulatory Aalpha subunit of PP2A, increasing its activity. These data show that the activated PP2A will then effect a change in the phosphorylation state of the cell. These data provide a link between the caspases and signal transduction pathways.
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PMID:Regulation of protein phosphatase 2A activity by caspase-3 during apoptosis. 958 51

Insulin and insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) are capable of protecting liver cells from apoptosis induced by transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta). The Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase)/Akt pathways are both activated upon insulin stimulation and can protect against apoptosis under certain circumstances. We investigated which of these pathways is responsible for the protective effect of insulin on TGF-beta-induced apoptosis. An activated Ras, although elicited a strong mitogenic effect, could not protect Hep3B cells from TGF-beta-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, PD98059, a selective inhibitor of MEK, did not suppress the antiapoptotic effect of insulin. In contrast, the PI 3-kinase inhibitor, LY294002, efficiently blocked the effect of insulin. Protection against TGF-beta-induced apoptosis conferred by PI 3-kinase was further verified by stable transfection of an activated PI 3-kinase. Downstream targets of PI 3-kinase involved in this protection was further investigated. An activated Akt mimicked the antiapoptotic effect of insulin, whereas a dominant-negative Akt inhibited such effect. However, rapamycin, the p70S6 kinase inhibitor, had no effect on the protectivity of insulin against TGF-beta-induced apoptosis, suggesting that the antiapoptotic target of PI 3-kinase/Akt pathway is independent or lies upstream of the p70S6 kinase. The mechanism by which PI 3-kinase/Akt pathway interferes with the apoptotic signaling of TGF-beta was explored. Activation of PI 3-kinase did not lead to a suppression of Smad hetero-oligomerization or nuclear translocation but blocked TGF-beta-induced caspase-3-like activity. In summary, the PI 3-kinase/Akt pathway, but not the Ras/MAP kinase pathway, protects against TGF-beta-induced apoptosis by inhibiting a step downstream of Smad but upstream of caspase-3.
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PMID:Suppression of transforming growth factor-beta-induced apoptosis through a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt-dependent pathway. 978 39

Fas and Fas-associated death domain (FADD) play a critical role in the homeostasis of different cell types. The regulation of Fas and FADD-mediated cell death is pivotal to many physiological functions. The activation of T lymphocytes by concanavalin A (Con A) inhibited Fas-mediated cell death. We identified that among the several activation signals downstream of Con A stimulation, mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase (MKK) was the major kinase pathway that antagonized Fas-triggered cell death. MKK1 suppressed FADD- but not caspase-3- induced apoptosis, indicating that antagonism occurred early along the Fas-initiated apoptotic cascade. We further demonstrated that activation of MKK1 led to expression of FLIP, a specific inhibitor of FADD. MKK1 inhibition of FADD-induced cell death was abrogated if induction of FLIP was prevented, indicating that FLIP mediates MKK1 suppression of FADD-mediated apoptosis. Our results illustrate a general mechanism by which activation of MAP kinase attenuates apoptotic signals initiated by death receptors in normal and transformed cells.
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PMID:Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase antagonized fas-associated death domain protein-mediated apoptosis by induced FLICE-inhibitory protein expression. 981 57

Intracellular signaling pathways that are involved in protection of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) from apoptosis remain poorly understood. This study examines the effect of activators of cAMP/cGMP signaling on apoptosis in non-transfected VSMC and in VSMC transfected with c-myc (VSMC-MYC) or with its functional analogue, E1A-adenoviral protein (VSMC-E1A). Serum-deprived VSMC-E1A exhibited the highest apoptosis measured as the content of chromatin and low molecular weight DNA fragments, phosphatidylserine content in the outer surface of plasma membrane and caspase-3 activity (ten-, five-, four- and tenfold increase after 6 h of serum withdrawal, respectively). In VSMC-E1A, the addition of an activator of adenylate cyclase, forskolin, abolished chromatin cleavage, DNA laddering, caspase-3 activation and the appearance of morphologically-defined apoptotic cells triggered by 6 h of serum deprivation. In non-transfected VSMC and in VSMC-MYC, 6 h serum deprivation led to approximately six- and threefold activation of chromatin cleavage, respectively, that was also blocked by forskolin. In VSMC-E1A, inhibition of apoptosis was observed with other activators of cAMP signaling (cholera toxin, isoproterenol, adenosine, 8-Br-cAMP), whereas 6 h incubation with modulators of cGMP signaling (8-Br-cGMP, nitroprusside, atrial natriuretic peptide, L-NAME) did not affect the development of apoptotic machinery. The antiapoptotic effect of forskolin was abolished in 24 h of serum deprivation that was accompanied by normalization of intracellular cAMP content and protein kinase A (PKA) activity. Protection of VSMC-E1A from apoptosis by forskolin was blunted by PKA inhibitors (H-89 and KT5720), whereas transfection of cells with PKA catalytic subunit attenuated apoptosis triggered by serum withdrawal. The protection of VSMC-E1A by forskolin from apoptosis was insensitive to modulators of cytoskeleton assembly (cytochalasin B, colchicine). Neither acute (30 min) nor chronic (24 h) exposure of VSMC to forskolin modified basal and serum-induced phosphorylation of the MAP kinase ERK1/2. Thus, our results show that activation of cAMP signaling delays the development of apoptosis in serum-deprived VSMC at a site upstream of caspase-3 via activation of PKA and independently of cAMP-induced reorganization of the cytoskeleton network and the ERK1/2-terminated MAPK signaling cascade.
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PMID:Activation of cAMP signaling transiently inhibits apoptosis in vascular smooth muscle cells in a site upstream of caspase-3. 1045 77

The effects of the protein kinase C (PKC) activator and down-regulator bryostatin 1 were examined with respect to paclitaxel-induced apoptosis and antiproliferative activity in human myeloid leukemia cells (U937) displaying enforced expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL. Overexpression of Bcl-xL blocked various aspects of paclitaxel-mediated apoptosis, including caspase-3 activation, degradation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta Psim), and release of cytochrome c. However, subsequent (but not prior) exposure of paclitaxel-treated U937/Bcl-xL cells (500 nM; 6 h) to bryostatin 1 (10 nM; 15 h) restored the extent of apoptosis, caspase activation, and mitochondrial damage to levels approximating those in paclitaxel-treated empty-vector control cells (U937/Neo). Potentiation of paclitaxel-induced apoptosis by bryostatin 1 in U937/Bcl-xL cells occurred primarily in the G2M cell population, and was associated with alterations in Bcl-xL gel mobility and a reduction in paclitaxel-mediated stimulation of CDK1 activity. Enhancement of paclitaxel-induced apoptosis by bryostatin 1 in Bcl-xL overexpressors was accompanied by a corresponding reduction in clonogenic potential. In contrast to its effects on apoptosis, bryostatin 1 failed to restore paclitaxel-mediated increases in free Bax levels in U937/Bcl-xL cells. Lastly, the actions of bryostatin 1 were mimicked by a pharmacologic inhibitor of the MEK1/MAP kinase pathway (PD98059), but not by SB203580, an inhibitor of p 38 MAP kinase. Moreover, sequential exposure of both U937/Neo or/Bcl-xL cells to paclitaxel followed by bryostatin 1 or PD98059 was associated with a net reduction in MAP kinase activity. Collectively, these findings indicate that protection against paclitaxel-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in human U937 leukemia cells conferred by Bcl-xL overexpression can be substantially overcome by bryostatin 1 and possibly other agents that interrupt the MAP kinase signal transduction pathway.
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PMID:Bryostatin 1 enhances paclitaxel-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in human leukemia cells (U937) ectopically expressing Bcl-xL. 1051 58

The earliest observed apoptotic change in a macrophage-like cell line, J774.1, treated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the presence of cycloheximide (CHX) was a selective increase in caspase-3-like activity. The addition of polymyxin B, TPCK, herbimycin A, or genistein, all of which inhibited LPS-induced tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) production by macrophages, suppressed the activation of the caspase-3-like protease in these macrophages treated simultaneously with CHX. However, SB202190 and SB203580, inhibitors of MAP kinase, and PD98059, an inhibitor of MAP-kinase kinase (MEK), showed no effect on the activation of the caspase-3-like protease or on the cell damage of the macrophages treated with LPS and CHX, whereas they inhibited LPS-induced TNF-alpha production. These results suggest that some of the early signals in LPS-treated macrophages are common to the subsequent pathways for TNF-alpha production and caspase-3-like protease activation, but the later signals, like MAP-kinase kinase or MAP-kinase, are not involved in the pathways for caspase-3-like protease activation.
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PMID:LPS-induced signals in activation of caspase-3-like protease, a key enzyme regulating apoptotic cell damage into a macrophage-like cell line, J774.1, in the presence of cycloheximide. 1053 27

1. ERKs belong to MAP kinase family and are activated by several growth and stress factors. Although ethanol has been shown to modulate ERK1 and ERK2 (p44(mapk) and p42(mapk)) activity, it can also act as an antiproliferative agent in various mammalian cells. Since the nature of the antiproliferative effect of ethanol in VSMCs has not been defined, we examined its effects on growth and on early intracellular events normally induced by growth factors in VSMCs. 2. Measurement of cytosolic Ca(2+) and pH in cell monolayers was performed using fura-2/AM and BCECF/AM, respectively. The effect of ethanol on VSMCs growth was assessed by [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation, by cell counting and by determination of the caspase 3 activity. Stimulation of ERK1 and ERK2 was examined by the chemiluminescence Western blotting method. The expression of c-fos was quantitated by Northern blotting. Determination of inositolphosphates was performed after labelling of VSMCs with myo-[2-(3)H]-inositol and separation of inositolphosphates by HPLC. 3. Ethanol (0.3 - 1.0% v v(-1), 17 - 170 mM) induced a dose-dependent maximal stimulation of p44(mapk)/p42(mapk) at 30 min and expression of c-fos mRNA with a maximum at 120 min. Intracellular events upstream to MAP kinase, like an increase in [Ca(2+)](i), activation of the Na(+)/H(+) exchanger and formation of phosphoinositol metabolites were also markedly activated by ethanol. Treatment of VSMCs with ethanol for 3 - 5 min induced an increase in DNA synthesis whereas treatment of the cells for more than 30 min was toxic. Caspase 3 activity was not modulated by ethanol treatment of VSMCs. 4. We may postulate that the activation of these mitogenic signals including the elevation of DNA synthesis reflects a cell effort to protect itself against the toxic effects of ethanol.
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PMID:Early intracellular signalling pathway of ethanol in vascular smooth muscle cells. 1058 32

Neutrophils are short-lived leukocytes that die by apoptosis. Whereas stress-induced apoptosis is mediated by the p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway (Frasch, S. C., Nick, J. A., Fadok, V. A., Bratton, D. L., Worthen, G. S., and Henson, P. M. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 8389-8397), signals regulating spontaneous neutrophil apoptosis have not been fully determined. In this study we found increased activation of protein kinase C (PKC)-beta and -delta in neutrophils undergoing spontaneous apoptosis, but we show that only activation of PKC-delta was directly involved in the induction of apoptosis. PKC-delta can be proteolytically activated by caspase 3. We detected the 40-kDa caspase-generated fragment of PKC-delta in apoptotic neutrophils and showed that the caspase 3 inhibitor Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-fluoromethylketone prevented generation of the 40-kDa PKC-delta fragment and delayed neutrophil apoptosis. In a cell-free system, removal of PKC-delta by immunoprecipitation reduced DNA fragmentation, whereas loss of PKC-alpha, -beta, or -zeta had no significant effect. Rottlerin and LY379196 inhibit PKC-delta and PKC-beta, respectively. Only Rottlerin was able to delay neutrophil apoptosis. Inhibitors of MAP-ERK kinase 1 (PD98059) or p38 MAP kinase (SB202190) had no effect on neutrophil apoptosis, and activation of p42/44 and p38 MAP kinase did not increase in apoptotic neutrophils. We conclude that spontaneous neutrophil apoptosis involves activation of PKC-delta but is MAP kinase-independent.
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PMID:Spontaneous neutrophil apoptosis involves caspase 3-mediated activation of protein kinase C-delta. 1060

Endothelin (ET)-1, an endothelium-derived vasoconstrictor and mitogen, acts as an antiapoptotic factor against serum deprivation-induced apoptosis of endothelial cells and fibroblasts but enhances apoptosis of some cancer cells. In the present study, we examined whether nitric oxide (NO) and ET-1 modulate apoptosis of rat vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) via the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway. Both serum deprivation and NO donors (FK409 and SNAP) caused apoptosis of VSMCs, as demonstrated by TdT-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end-labeling, appearance of fragmented DNA, and induction of caspase-3 activity. ET-1 dose-dependently antagonized apoptosis induced by serum deprivation and NO donors. A selective ET(A) receptor antagonist (BQ123) and a nonselective ET(A/B) receptor antagonist (TAK044), but not a selective ET(B) receptor antagonist (BQ788), inhibited the antiapoptotic effect of ET-1, indicating that the antiapoptotic effect of ET-1 is mediated via the ET(A) receptor. ET-1 activated MAP kinase, whose effect was inhibited by FK409. Transfection with an unphosphorylated wild-type MAP kinase kinase-1 (MAPKK-1) or its constitutively activated mutant protected VSMCs against apoptosis induced by serum deprivation and NO donors. Inhibition of MAP kinase activity with PD98059, a specific inhibitor of MAPKK-1, or by transfection of a dominant-negative MAPKK-1 mutant antagonized the antiapoptotic effect of ET-1, suggesting the involvement of MAP kinase in the antiapoptotic effect. The potent inhibitory effect of ET-1 on apoptosis of VSMCs induced by serum deprivation and NO suggests that the counterbalance between the 2 endothelium-derived factors contributes to the process of vascular remodeling by determining VSMC survival and death, respectively, via a common MAP kinase pathway.
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PMID:Endothelin-1 inhibits apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells induced by nitric oxide and serum deprivation via MAP kinase pathway. 1076 63

MAP kinase-dependent phosphorylation processes have been shown to interfere with the degradation of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. The cytosolic MAP kinase phosphatase MAP kinase phosphatase-3 (MKP-3) induces apoptosis of endothelial cells in response to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) via dephosphorylation of the MAP kinase ERK1/2, leading to Bcl-2 proteolysis. Here we report that the endothelial cell survival factor nitric oxide (NO) down-regulated MKP-3 by destabilization of MKP-3 mRNA. This effect of NO was paralleled by a decrease in MKP-3 protein levels. Moreover, ERK1/2 was found to be protected against TNFalpha-induced dephosphorylation by coincubation of endothelial cells with the NO donor. Subsequently, both the decrease in Bcl-2 protein levels and the mitochondrial release of cytochrome c in response to TNFalpha were largely prevented by exogenous NO. In cells overexpressing MKP-3, no differences in phosphatase activity in the presence or absence of NO were found, excluding potential posttranslational modifications of MKP-3 protein by NO. These data demonstrate that upstream of the S-nitrosylation of caspase-3, NO exerts additional antiapoptotic effects in endothelial cells, which rely on the down-regulation of MKP-3 mRNA.
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PMID:Nitric oxide down-regulates MKP-3 mRNA levels: involvement in endothelial cell protection from apoptosis. 1084 76


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