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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Differentiation-inducing factor (DIF) is a lipophilic hormone of Dicytostelium discoideum and has been shown to exert diverse effects in mammalian cells. We investigated the effect of DIF on cell viability in insulin-secreting
INS-1
cells. DIF induced cell death in a dose-dependent manner. In DIF-treated cells, nuclear condensation and shrinkage of the cell body were observed. After 6 h of DIF treatment, cells became Tdt-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end-labeling-positive, and DNA ladder formation was detected, indicating that DIF induced apoptosis in these cells. DIF did not activate
caspase-3
, a key enzyme mediating apoptotic signals generated by various agents. Furthermore, DIF-induced cell death was not affected by Z-asp-2, 6-dichlorobenzoyloxymethylketone, a broad inhibitor of the caspases. As is the case in other types of cells, DIF increased cytoplasmic free calcium concentration in
INS-1
cells. However, DIF-induced cell death was not affected by chelating intracellular free calcium by 1, 2-bis(2-aminoophenoxy)ethane-N, N, N, N-tetra acetic acid (BAPTA). These results indicate that DIF induces apoptosis in
INS-1
cells by a mechanism independent of
caspase-3
. DIF-induced elevation of cytoplasmic calcium does not mediate the effect of DIF on cell death.
...
PMID:Caspase-independent apoptosis induced by differentiation-inducing factor of Dicytostelium discoideum in INS-1 cells. 1139 64
Maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) 3 is a monogenic form of diabetes caused by mutations in the transcription factor hepatocyte nuclear factor (HNF)-1 alpha. We investigated the involvement of apoptotic events in
INS-1
insulinoma cells overexpressing wild-type HNF-1 alpha (WT-HNF-1 alpha) or a dominant-negative mutant (DN-HNF-1 alpha) under control of a doxycycline-dependent transcriptional activator. Forty-eight h after induction of DN-HNF-1 alpha,
INS-1
cells activated
caspase-3
and underwent apoptotic cell death, while cells overexpressing WT-HNF-1 alpha remained viable. Mitochondrial cytochrome c release and activation of caspase-9 accompanied DN-HNF-1 alpha-induced apoptosis, suggesting the involvement of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. Activation of caspases was preceded by mitochondrial hyperpolarization and decreased expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL. Transient overexpression of Bcl-xL was sufficient to rescue
INS-1
cells from DN-HNF-1 alpha-induced apoptosis. Both WT- and DN-HNF-1 alpha-expressing cells demonstrated similar increases in apoptosis when cultured at high glucose (25 mm). In contrast, induction of DN-HNF-1 alpha highly sensitized cells to ceramide toxicity. In cells cultured at low glucose, DN-HNF-1 alpha induction also caused up-regulation of the cell cycle inhibitor p27(KIP1). Therefore, our data indicate that increased sensitivity to the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway and decreased cell proliferation may account for the progressive loss of beta-cell function seen in MODY 3 subjects.
...
PMID:Dominant-negative suppression of HNF-1 alpha results in mitochondrial dysfunction, INS-1 cell apoptosis, and increased sensitivity to ceramide-, but not to high glucose-induced cell death. 1172 85
Exposure of pancreatic beta-cells to cytokines, such as interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), is thought to contribute to the beta-cell apoptosis that underlies the onset of type 1 diabetes. One important event triggered by IL-1beta is induction of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), an enzyme that catalyzes intracellular generation of the cytotoxic free radical NO. We recently described a novel requirement for the protein kinase C (PKC) isozyme PKCdelta in this process. Our current aim, therefore, was to assess whether PKCdelta also plays a role in beta-cell apoptosis. As assessed by either annexin V staining or DNA fragmentation, IL-1beta caused
INS-1
cells to undergo apoptosis. This was completely blocked by adenoviral overexpression of a dominant-negative, kinase-dead (KD) PKCdelta mutant. The corresponding PKCalpha virus was without effect. However, apoptosis caused by the cytotoxic agent streptozotocin (STZ), which acts independent of iNOS, was also inhibited by overexpression of PKCdeltaKD. STZ was additionally shown to activate the proteolytic enzyme
caspase-3
, a key biochemical effector of end-stage apoptosis. Moreover, STZ caused a caspase-dependent cleavage of PKCdelta, thereby releasing a COOH-terminal fragment corresponding to the kinase catalytic domain. Thus, proteolytic activation of PKCdelta seems to be important in the distal apoptotic pathway induced by STZ. That IL-1beta also activated
caspase-3
and promoted PKCdelta cleavage suggests that this distal pathway also contributes in the apoptotic response to the cytokine. These data therefore support a dual role for PKCdelta in IL-1beta-mediated cell death: it is required for efficient NO generation through regulation of iNOS levels but also contributes to apoptotic pathways downstream of caspase activation.
...
PMID:Inhibition of protein kinase C delta protects rat INS-1 cells against interleukin-1beta and streptozotocin-induced apoptosis. 1181 38
Free fatty acids (FFA) have been reported to reduce pancreatic beta-cell mitogenesis and to increase apoptosis. Here we show that the FFA, oleic acid, increased apoptosis 16-fold in the pancreatic beta-cell line,
INS-1
, over a 18-h period as assessed by Hoechst 33342/propidium iodide staining and
caspase-3
and -9 activation, with negligible necrosis. A parallel analysis of the phosphorylation activation of protein kinase B (PKB) showed this was reduced in the presence of FFA that correlated with the incidence of apoptosis. At stimulatory 15 mm glucose and/or in the added presence of insulin-like growth factor 1, FFA-induced beta-cell apoptosis was lessened compared with that at a basal 5 mm glucose. However, most strikingly, adenoviral mediated expression of a constitutively active PKB, but not a "kinase-dead" PKB variant, essentially prevented FFA-induced beta-cell apoptosis under all glucose/insulin-like growth factor 1 conditions. Further analysis of pro-apoptotic downstream targets of PKB, implicated a role for PKB-mediated phosphorylation inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3alpha/beta and the forkhead transcription factor, FoxO1, in protection of FFA-induced beta-cell apoptosis. In addition, down-regulation of the pro-apoptotic tumor suppressor protein, p53, via PKB-mediated phosphorylation of MDM2 might also play a role in partially protecting beta-cells from FFA-induced apoptosis. Adenoviral mediated expression of wild type p53 potentiated FFA-induced beta-cell apoptosis, whereas expression of a dominant negative p53 partly inhibited beta-cell apoptosis by approximately 50%. Hence, these data demonstrate that PKB activation plays an important role in promoting pancreatic beta-cell survival in part via inhibition of the pro-apoptotic proteins glycogen synthase kinase-3alpha/beta, FoxO1, and p53. This, in turn, provides novel insight into the mechanisms involved in FFA-induced beta-cell apoptosis.
...
PMID:Protein kinase B/Akt prevents fatty acid-induced apoptosis in pancreatic beta-cells (INS-1). 1239 70
In insulin-secreting cells, cytokines activate the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), which contributes to a cell signaling towards apoptosis. The JNK activation requires the presence of the murine scaffold protein JNK-interacting protein 1 (JIP-1) or human Islet-brain 1(IB1), which organizes MLK3, MKK7 and JNK for proper signaling specificity. Here, we used adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to modulate IB1/JIP-1 cellular content in order to investigate the contribution of IB1/JIP-1 to beta-cell survival. Exposure of the insulin-producing cell line
INS-1
or isolated rat pancreatic islets to cytokines (interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1beta) induced a marked reduction of IB1/JIP-1 content and a concomitant increase in JNK activity and apoptosis rate. This JNK-induced pro-apoptotic program was prevented in
INS-1
cells by overproducing IB1/JIP-1 and this effect was associated with inhibition of
caspase-3
cleavage. Conversely, reducing IB1/JIP-1 content in
INS-1
cells and isolated pancreatic islets induced a robust increase in basal and cytokine-stimulated apoptosis. In heterozygous mice carrying a selective disruption of the IB1/JIP-1 gene, the reduction in IB1/JIP-1 content in happloinsufficient isolated pancreatic islets was associated with an increased JNK activity and basal apoptosis. These data demonstrate that modulation of the IB1-JIP-1 content in beta cells is a crucial regulator of JNK signaling pathway and of cytokine-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:The scaffold protein IB1/JIP-1 is a critical mediator of cytokine-induced apoptosis in pancreatic beta cells. 1264 31
The incretin glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) is a major regulator of postprandial insulin secretion in mammals. Recent studies in our laboratory, and others have suggested that GIP is a potent stimulus for protein kinase activation, including the MAPK (ERK1/2) module. Based on these studies, we hypothesized that GIP could regulate cell fate and sought to examine the underlying mechanisms involved in GIP stimulation of cell survival. GIP potentiated glucose-induced beta-(
INS-1
)-cell growth to levels comparable with GH and GLP-1 while promoting cell survival in the face of serum and glucose-deprivation or treatment with wortmannin or streptozotocin. In the absence of GIP, 50% of cells died after 48 h of serum and glucose withdrawal, whereas 91 +/- 10% of cells remained viable in the presence of GIP [n = 3, P < 0.05; EC50 of 1.24 +/- 0.48 nm GIP (n = 4)]. Effects of GIP on cell survival and inhibition of
caspase-3
were mimicked by forskolin, but pharmacological experiments excluded roles for MAPK kinase (Mek)1/2, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, protein kinase A, Epac, and Rap 1. Survival effects of GIP were ablated by the inhibitor SB202190, indicating a role for p38 MAPK. Furthermore,
caspase-3
activity was also regulated by p38 MAPK, with a lesser role for Mek1/2, based on RNA interference studies. We propose that GIP is able to reverse
caspase-3
activation via inhibition of long-term p38 MAPK phosphorylation in response to glucose deprivation (+/-wortmannin). Intriguingly, these findings contrasted with short-term phosphorylation of MKK3/6-->p38 MAPK-->ATF-2 by GIP. Thus, these data suggest that GIP is able to regulate
INS-1
cell survival by dynamic control of p38 MAPK phosphorylation via cAMP signaling and lend further support to the notion that GIP regulation of MAPK signaling is critical for its regulation of cell fate.
...
PMID:Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide promotes beta-(INS-1) cell survival via cyclic adenosine monophosphate-mediated caspase-3 inhibition and regulation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. 1296 55
Insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-2 has been implicated in the promotion of beta-cell survival. Here we tested the hypothesis that the novel analog [LysB3, GluB29] insulin (insulin glulisine, IG) might mediate an enhanced beta-cell protective effect due to its unique property of preferential IRS-2 phosphorylation. We assessed IRS activation by IG and its anti-apoptotic activity against cytokines or palmitic acid in comparison to insulin, insulin analogs, and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I using
INS-1
cells. IG induced a prominent IRS-2 activation without significant IRS-1 stimulation. The marked cytokine- and fatty acid-induced apoptosis was strongly (55-60%) inhibited by IG both at the level of
caspase 3
activation and nucleosomal release, with only 15% inhibition of apoptosis by regular insulin. At 1nM, insulin, insulin aspart, and insulin lispro were much less effective compared to IG. In conclusion, the prominent anti-apoptotic activity of insulin glulisine might serve to counteract autoimmune- and lipotoxicity-induced beta-cell destruction.
...
PMID:[LysB3, GluB29] insulin: a novel insulin analog with enhanced beta-cell protective action. 1455 Feb 82
We recently demonstrated that functional inactivation of H-Ras results in significant reduction in interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta)-mediated effects on isolated beta cells. Since palmitoylation of Ras has been implicated in its membrane targeting, we examined the contributory roles of palmitoylation of Ras in IL-1 beta-induced nitric oxide (NO) release and subsequent activation of caspases. Preincubation of HIT-T15 or
INS-1
cells with cerulenin (CER, 134 microM; 3 hr), an inhibitor of protein palmitoylation, significantly reduced (-95%) IL-1 beta-induced NO release from these cells. 2-Bromopalmitate, a structurally distinct inhibitor of protein palmitoylation, but not 2-hydroxymyristic acid, an inhibitor of protein myristoylation, also reduced (-67%) IL-1 beta-induced NO release from HIT cells. IL-induced inducible nitric oxide synthase gene expression was markedly attenuated by CER. Further, CER markedly reduced incorporation of [3H]palmitate into H-Ras and caused significant accumulation of Ras in the cytosolic fraction. CER-treatment also prevented IL-1 beta-induced activation of
caspase 3
in these cells. Moreover, N-monomethyl-L-arginine, a known inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase, markedly inhibited IL-induced activation of
caspase 3
, thus establishing a link between IL-induced NO release and
caspase 3
activation. Depletion of membrane-bound cholesterol using methyl-beta-cyclodextrin, which also disrupts caveolar organization within the plasma membrane, abolished IL-1 beta-induced NO release suggesting that IL-1 beta-mediated Ras-dependent signaling in these cells involves the intermediacy of caveolae and their key constituents (e.g. caveolin-1) in isolated beta cells. Confocal light microscopic evidence indicated significant colocalization of Ras with caveolin-1. Taken together, our data provide the first evidence to indicate that palmitoylation of Ras is essential for IL-1 beta-induced cytotoxic effects on the islet beta cell.
...
PMID:Novel roles for palmitoylation of Ras in IL-1 beta-induced nitric oxide release and caspase 3 activation in insulin-secreting beta cells. 1456 79
The death of insulin-secreting beta-cells that causes type I diabetes mellitus (DM) occurs in part by apoptosis, and apoptosis also contributes to progressive beta-cell dysfunction in type II DM. Recent reports indicate that ER stress-induced apoptosis contributes to beta-cell loss in diabetes. Agents that deplete ER calcium levels induce beta-cell apoptosis by a process that is independent of increases in [Ca(2+)](i). Here we report that the SERCA inhibitor thapsigargin induces apoptosis in
INS-1
insulinoma cells and that this is inhibited by a bromoenol lactone (BEL) inhibitor of group VIA calcium-independent phospholipase A(2) (iPLA(2)beta). Overexpression of iPLA(2)beta amplifies thapsigargin-induced apoptosis of
INS-1
cells, and this is also suppressed by BEL. The magnitude of thapsigargin-induced
INS-1
cell apoptosis correlates with the level of iPLA(2)beta expression in various cell lines, and apoptosis is associated with stimulation of iPLA(2)beta activity, perinuclear accumulation of iPLA(2)beta protein and activity, and
caspase-3
-catalyzed cleavage of full-length 84 kDa iPLA(2)beta to a 62 kDa product that associates with nuclei. Thapsigargin also induces ceramide accumulation in
INS-1
cells, and this response is amplified in cells that overexpress iPLA(2)beta. These findings indicate that iPLA(2)beta participates in ER stress-induced apoptosis, a pathway that promotes beta-cell death in diabetes.
...
PMID:Apoptosis of insulin-secreting cells induced by endoplasmic reticulum stress is amplified by overexpression of group VIA calcium-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2 beta) and suppressed by inhibition of iPLA2 beta. 1474 35
Recently, we identified thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP) as the most dramatically glucose-induced gene in our human islet microarray study. TXNIP is a regulator of the cellular redox state, but its role in pancreatic beta-cells and the mechanism of its regulation by glucose remain unknown. We therefore generated a stable transfected beta-cell line (
INS-1
) overexpressing human TXNIP and found that TXNIP overexpression induced apoptosis as assessed by Bax, Bcl2,
caspase-3
, and cleaved caspase-9 as well as Hoechst staining. Interestingly, islets of insulin-resistant/diabetic mice (AZIP-F1, BTBRob/ob) demonstrated elevated TXNIP expression, suggesting that TXNIP may play a role in glucotoxicity and the beta-cell loss observed under these conditions. Furthermore, we found that glucose-induced TXNIP transcription is not dependent on glucose metabolism and is mediated by a distinct carbohydrate response element (ChoRE) in the human TXNIP promoter consisting of a perfect nonpalindromic repeat of two E-boxes. Transfection studies demonstrated that this ChoRE was necessary and sufficient to confer glucose responsiveness. Thus, TXNIP is a novel proapoptotic beta-cell gene elevated in insulin resistance/diabetes and up-regulated by glucose through a unique ChoRE and may link glucotoxicity and beta-cell apoptosis.
...
PMID:Thioredoxin-interacting protein is stimulated by glucose through a carbohydrate response element and induces beta-cell apoptosis. 1570 78
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