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)

Apoptosis (programmed cell death) is a fundamental process for normal development of multicellular organisms, and is involved in the regulation of the immune system, normal morphogenesis, and maintenance of homeostasis, ICE/CED-3 family cysteine proteases have been implicated directly in apoptosis, but relatively few of the substrates through which their action is mediated have been identified. Here we report that D4-GDI, an abundant hematopoietic cell GDP dissociation inhibitor for the Ras-related Rho family GTPases, is a substrate of the apoptosis protease CPP32/Yama/Apopain. D4-GDI was rapidly truncated to a 23-kDa fragment in Jurkat cells with kinetics that parallel the onset of apoptosis following Fas cross-linking with agonistic antibody or treatment with staurosporine. Fas- and staurosporine-induced apoptosis as well as cleavage of D4-GDI were inhibited by the ICE inhibitor, YVAD-cmk. D4-GDI was cleaved in vitro by recombinant CPP32 expressed in Escherichia coli to form a 23-kDa fragment. The CPP32-mediated cleavage of D4-GDI was completely inhibited by 1 microM DEVD-CHO, a reported selective inhibitor of CPP32. In contrast, the ICE-selective inhibitors, YVAD-CHO or YVAD-cmk, did not inhibit CPP32-mediated D4-GDI cleavage at concentrations up to 50 microM. N-terminal sequencing of the 23-kDa D4-GDI fragment demonstrated that D4-GDI was cleaved between Asp19 and Ser20 of the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-like cleavage sequence DELD19S. These data suggest that regulation by D4-GDI of Rho family GTPases may be disrupted during apoptosis by CPP32-mediated cleavage of the GDI protein.
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PMID:D4-GDI, a substrate of CPP32, is proteolyzed during Fas-induced apoptosis. 862 69

Fas and p55 tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR) transfer an apoptosis signal when they are crosstinked with their ligands or agonistic antibodies. However, the signal transduction mechanism of apoptosis via Fas and p55 TNFR has not yet been elucidated. We previously described a recessive mutant UK110 from the human monocytic leukemia U937 cell line, that showed resistance against Fas- and p55 TNFR-mediated apoptosis. By cytogenetic analysis and microcell-fusion method, we demonstrate here that introduction of chromosome 22 can specifically restore the sensitivity to Fas- and TNF-mediated apoptosis in UK110 cells. Moreover, introduction of chromosome 22 into UK110 can complement the processing of interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE)-like proteases, such as CPP32/Yama/Apopain and ICH-1L, after treatment with anti-Fas and anti-p55 TNFR antibodies. These results suggest that the product of a gene located on chromosome 22 participates in the Fas-and p55 TNFR-mediated apoptosis at a point upstream of ICE-like proteases.
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PMID:Chromosome 22 complements apoptosis in Fas-and TNF-resistant mutant UK110 cells. 870 May 52

Recent studies have shown that protein kinase C (PKC) delta is proteolytically activated at the onset of apoptosis induced by DNA-damaging agents, tumor necrosis factor, and anti-Fas antibody. However, the relationship of PKC delta cleavage to induction of apoptosis is unknown. The present studies demonstrate that full-length PKC delta is cleaved at DMQD330N to a catalytically active fragment by the cysteine protease CPP32. The results also demonstrate that overexpression of the catalytic kinase fragment in cells is associated with chromatin condensation, nuclear fragmentation, induction of sub-G1 phase DNA and lethality. By contrast, overexpression of full-length PKC delta or a kinase inactive PKC delta fragment had no detectable effect. The findings suggest that proteolytic activation of PKC delta by a CPP32-like protease contributes to phenotypic changes associated with apoptosis.
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PMID:Proteolytic activation of protein kinase C delta by an ICE/CED 3-like protease induces characteristics of apoptosis. 897 94

We have characterized viral-cell interactions of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and liver cells to study the pathogenesis of HCV infection. HepG2 cells constitutively expressing HCV core protein showed apoptotic changes in response to stimulation with anti-Fas monoclonal antibody. Cells treated with the antibody showed extensive cell rounding, shrinkage, and cytoplasmic blebbing and finally detached from plates. Fragmentation of the chromatin was observed in the nucleus and DNA ladders were detected. In contrast, cells expressing HCV envelope, nonstructural proteins or normal HepG2 cells did not exhibit such Fas-mediated apoptosis. However, expression of Fas receptor was not upregulated on the surface of the cells expressing HCV core protein. Apoptotic cell death was prevented by pretreatment with a specific inhibitor of the cysteine protease CPP32, while the specific inhibitor of interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme did not show the preventive effect. The results suggest (i) that intracellular expression of HCV core protein makes cells prone to apoptotic death without upregulation of surface Fas expression and (ii) that the CPP32 protease plays a part in the apoptosis effector pathway of HCV core-expressing cells. HCV core protein may have a role in immune-mediated liver cell injury.
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PMID:Sensitization to Fas-mediated apoptosis by hepatitis C virus core protein. 912 79

On stimulation by the Fas ligand, the death receptor, Fas, initiates a signal leading to apoptotic cell death. Fas plays an important role in physiological cell death and is closely involved in various disease states. Recent investigations have shown that caspase 3 plays a dominant role in the process of Fas-mediated apoptosis. In the present study, we investigated the molecular machinery of caspase 3 activation in Fas-mediated apoptosis. The results showed that Fas-mediated apoptosis was accompanied by caspase 3 activation, and both Fas-mediated apoptosis and caspase 3 activation were prevented by a serine proteinase inhibitor. In addition, the serine proteinase inhibitor also prevented the caspase 3 activation in cytoplasts, and the specific activation of serineproteinase was encountered in only cytoplasmic proteins. These results suggest that cytoplasmic serineproteinase plays an important role in caspase 3 activation. Interestingly, caspase 3 was cleaved at p3 site immediately after Fas Ab stimulation, and the cleavage at p17 site became detectable later. We also found that among tested proteinases only Staphylococcus aureus V8 serineproteinase initiated caspase 3 activation and specifically cleaved at p3 site. These results strongly suggest that a cytoplasmic S. aureus V8-like serine proteinase is closely involved in caspase 3 activation.
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PMID:Involvement of cytoplasmic serine proteinase and CPP32 subfamily in the molecular machinery of caspase 3 activation during Fas-mediated apoptosis. 918 75

In the granule exocytosis pathway of cell-mediated cytotoxicity, rapid apoptotic nuclear damage in target cells has been unequivocally linked to granzyme B activity. Direct cleavage and activation of caspase-3 and related proteases by granzyme B have been identified as a central event in apoptosis induction by cytotoxic granules. The Bcl-2 oncoprotein has been recently shown to act at the level or upstream of caspase-3 family activation to inhibit apoptosis induced by various stimuli including Fas ligation, an alternative cell-mediated lytic pathway. In this study, we have investigated whether activation of this caspase family by granzyme B, during human NK and lymphokine-activated killer cell granule-mediated apoptosis, could be influenced by Bcl-2 expression. Bcl-2-overexpressing clones were generated from parental K562 and U937 cell lines (K6 and U4 clones, respectively). Bcl-2 expression abrogated early 125I-DNA release and DNA fragmentation, these defects being compensated for by extended incubation times. Cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, a specific caspase-3 family substrate, was detected in parental K562 cells exposed to lymphokine-activated killer effectors but not in K6 targets, indicating that caspase-3 and related proteases function was inhibited by Bcl-2. Functional inhibition of caspase-3 family with benzyloxycarbonyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp(OMe) fluoromethylketone led to similar consequences on apoptotic nuclear events as for Bcl-2 expression. Thus, Bcl-2 antagonizes granzyme B-mediated apoptosis by a mechanism that interferes with caspase-3 activity. Finally, Bcl-2 expression or the Asp-Glu-Val-Asp peptide was much less efficient in preventing phosphatidylserine externalization, suggesting that despite impaired nuclear apoptosis, immediate recognition and elimination of Bcl-2-expressing cells by tissue phagocytes should remain partly unaffected.
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PMID:Bcl-2 expression in target cells leads to functional inhibition of caspase-3 protease family in human NK and lymphokine-activated killer cell granule-mediated apoptosis. 920 Apr 47

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.
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PMID:p53-dependent DNA damage-induced apoptosis requires Fas/APO-1-independent activation of CPP32beta. 920 51

According to current understanding, cytoplasmic events including activation of protease cascades and mitochondrial permeability transition (PT) participate in the control of nuclear apoptosis. However, the relationship between protease activation and PT has remained elusive. When apoptosis is induced by cross-linking of the Fas/APO-1/CD95 receptor, activation of interleukin-1beta converting enzyme (ICE; caspase 1) or ICE-like enzymes precedes the disruption of the mitochondrial inner transmembrane potential (DeltaPsim). In contrast, cytosolic CPP32/ Yama/Apopain/caspase 3 activation, plasma membrane phosphatidyl serine exposure, and nuclear apoptosis only occur in cells in which the DeltaPsim is fully disrupted. Transfection with the cowpox protease inhibitor crmA or culture in the presence of the synthetic ICE-specific inhibitor Ac-YVAD.cmk both prevent the DeltaPsim collapse and subsequent apoptosis. Cytosols from anti-Fas-treated human lymphoma cells accumulate an activity that induces PT in isolated mitochondria in vitro and that is neutralized by crmA or Ac-YVAD.cmk. Recombinant purified ICE suffices to cause isolated mitochondria to undergo PT-like large amplitude swelling and to disrupt their DeltaPsim. In addition, ICE-treated mitochondria release an apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) that induces apoptotic changes (chromatin condensation and oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation) in isolated nuclei in vitro. AIF is a protease (or protease activator) that can be inhibited by the broad spectrum apoptosis inhibitor Z-VAD.fmk and that causes the proteolytical activation of CPP32. Although Bcl-2 is a highly efficient inhibitor of mitochondrial alterations (large amplitude swelling + DeltaPsim collapse + release of AIF) induced by prooxidants or cytosols from ceramide-treated cells, it has no effect on the ICE-induced mitochondrial PT and AIF release. These data connect a protease activation pathway with the mitochondrial phase of apoptosis regulation. In addition, they provide a plausible explanation of why Bcl-2 fails to interfere with Fas-triggered apoptosis in most cell types, yet prevents ceramide- and prooxidant-induced apoptosis.
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PMID:The central executioner of apoptosis: multiple connections between protease activation and mitochondria in Fas/APO-1/CD95- and ceramide-induced apoptosis. 920 94

Caspases are cysteine proteases that play a central role in apoptosis. Caspase-8 may be the first enzyme of the proteolytic cascade activated by the Fas ligand and tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Caspase-8 is recruited to Fas and TNF receptor-1 (TNF-R1) through interaction of its prodomain with the death effector domain (DED) of the receptor-associating FADD. Here we describe a novel 55 kDa protein, Casper, that has sequence similarity to caspase-8 throughout its length. However, Casper is not a caspase since it lacks several conserved amino acids found in all caspases. Casper interacts with FADD, caspase-8, caspase-3, TRAF1, and TRAF2 through distinct domains. When overexpressed in mammalian cells, Casper potently induces apoptosis. A C-terminal deletion mutant of Casper inhibits TNF- and Fas-induced cell death, suggesting that Casper is involved in these apoptotic pathways.
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PMID:Casper is a FADD- and caspase-related inducer of apoptosis. 920 47

Proteases of the caspase family, especially caspase-1 (ICE)(-like), caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama/apopain)(-like) and caspase-8 (MACH/FLICE/Mch5) proteases, are implicated in Fas (APO-1/CD95)-mediated apoptosis. Here, we show that the caspase-4 (TX/ICH-2/ICE(rel)II)(-like) protease, another member of the caspase family, is also involved in Fas-mediated apoptosis, based upon the observations: (i) caspase-4 is processed in response to an agonistic anti-Fas antibody treatment, (ii) overexpression of a mutant caspase-4 with active site mutations in both p20 and p10 subunits delays Fas-mediated apoptosis, (iii) microinjected anti-caspase-4 antibodies inhibit Fas-mediated apoptosis. Together with our observations that the mutant caspase-4 inhibits the Fas-mediated activation of caspase-3(-like) proteases and purified caspase-4 cleaves pro-caspase-3 to generate a subunit of active form, these results suggest that Fas-mediated apoptosis is driven by a caspase cascade in which the caspase-4(-like) protease transmits a death signal from caspase-8 to caspase-3(-like) proteases probably through directly cleaving pro-caspase-3(-like) proteases.
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PMID:Involvement of caspase-4(-like) protease in Fas-mediated apoptotic pathway. 923 63


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