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)

We have previously reported that vitamin K2 (VK2) has a potent apoptosis inducing activity toward various types of primary cultured leukemia cells including acute myelogenous leukemia arising from myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). We established a novel cell line, designated MDS-KZ, from a patient with MDS in blastic transformation, and further investigated the effects of VK2 using this novel cell line. MDS-KZ shows complex chromosomal anomaly including -4, 5q-, -7, 13q+, 20q-, consistent with that seen in the original patient. Culture of MDS-KZ cells in RPMI1640 medium containing 10% FBS lead to steady but very slow proliferation with a doubling time of 14 days. However, the cellular growth rate was significantly accelerated in the presence of various growth factors such as granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, stem cell factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin-3, and thrombopoietin. Most of the cultured cells show the morphological features of myeloblasts. They are positive for CD7, CD33, CD34, CD45, CD117, and HLA-DR. However, about 10% of the cells are more mature metamyelocytes and neutrophils with various dysplastic characteristics such as pseudo-Pelger nuclear anomaly and hypersegmentation, suggesting a potential for differentiation in this cell line. As previously reported for cultured primary leukemia cells, exposure to VK2, but not to VK1, resulted in induction of apoptosis of MDS-KZ cells in a dose-dependent manner (IC50: 5 microM). In addition, VK2 treatment induced down-regulation of BCL-2 and up-regulation of BAX protein expression with concomitant activation of caspase-3 (CPP32). A tetrapeptide functioning as antagonist of caspase-3, Ac-DEVD-H, suppressed the VK2-induced inhibition of cell growth, suggesting that caspase-3 is, at least in part, involved in VK2-induced apoptosis. These observations suggest that the MDS-KZ cell line can serve as a model for the study of the molecular mechanisms of VK2-induced apoptosis.
Leukemia 1999 Sep
PMID:Vitamin K2 induces apoptosis of a novel cell line established from a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome in blastic transformation. 1048 91

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.
Leukemia 1999 Oct
PMID:Bryostatin 1 enhances paclitaxel-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in human leukemia cells (U937) ectopically expressing Bcl-xL. 1051 58

Glucocorticoids and fludarabine are able to induce typical features of apoptosis in CLL lymphocytes. Cysteinyl aspartate specific proteases (caspases) play a key biochemical role in the apoptotic pathway. Caspase activation following cytotoxic stimuli leads to highly specific proteolytic cleavage of functionally important cellular enzymes. One of them is poly ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). To some extent caspase activation seems to be under the control of the Bcl-2 family of interacting proteins. We determined the role of Bcl-2-family proteins Bcl-2 (anti-apoptotic) and Bax (pro-apoptotic), activation of caspase-3 (CPP32/Yama) and activation of PARP in CLL apoptosis. All 21 analyzed CLL samples expressed Bcl-2 and Bax. Four of 13 (31%) samples with a low Bcl-2/Bax ratio exhibited in vitro prednisolone resistance, whereas eight of nine (88%) samples with a high Bcl-2/Bax ratio were in vitro resistant (</=0.025). There was no significant correlation between clinical pre-treatment status and Bcl-2/Bax ratio. Caspase-3/CPP32 activity increase was registered after dexamethasone as well as after fludarabine treatment in CLL lymphocytes in vitro. Caspase inhibitor Z-VAD.fmk was only able to partially block dexamethasone-induced and spontaneous apoptosis but not fludarabine-induced apoptosis in CLL lymphocytes. PARP activity decreased after dexamethasone and fludarabine treatment. PARP inhibitor 3-aminobenzamide (3-AB) was able to partially inhibit dexamethasone-induced apoptosis but not fludarabine-induced and spontaneous apoptosis.
Leukemia 1999 Nov
PMID:Drug-induced apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 1055 65

Recent studies showed that arsenic trioxide (As2O3) could induce apoptosis and partial differentiation of leukemic promyelocytes. Here, we addressed the possible mechanisms underlying these two different effects. 1.0 microM As2O3-induced apoptosis was associated with condensation of the mitochondrial matrix, disruption of mitochondrial transmembrane potentials (DeltaPsim) and activation of caspase-3 in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cells regardless of their sensitivity to all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA). All these effects were inhibited by dithiothreitol (DTT) and enhanced by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO). Furthermore, BSO could also render HL60 and U937 cells, which had the higher cellular catalase activity, sensitive to As2O3-induced apoptosis. Surprisingly, 1.0 microM As2O3 did not induce the DeltaPsim collapse and apoptosis, while 0.1 microM As2O3 induced partial differentiation of fresh BM cells from a de novo APL patient. In this study, we also showed that 0.2 mM DTT did not block low-dose As2O3-induced NB4 cell differentiation, and 0. 10.5 microM As2O3 did not induce differentiation of ATRA-resistant NB4-derived sublines, which were confirmed by cytomorphology, expression of CD11b, CD33 and CD14 as well as NBT reduction. Another interesting finding was that 0.10.5 microM As2O3 could also induce differentiation-related changes in ATRA-sensitive HL60 cells. However, the differentiation-inducing effect could not be seen in ATRA-resistant HL60 sublines with RARalpha mutation. Moreover, low-dose As2O3 and ATRA yielded similar gene expression profiles in APL cells. These results encouraged us to hypothesize that As2O3 induces APL cell differentiation through direct or indirect activation of retinoic acid receptor-related signaling pathway(s), while DeltaPsim collapse is the common mechanism of As2O3-induced apoptosis.
Leukemia 2000 Feb
PMID:Arsenic trioxide-induced apoptosis and differentiation are associated respectively with mitochondrial transmembrane potential collapse and retinoic acid signaling pathways in acute promyelocytic leukemia. 1067 43

The mechanism of apoptosis induced by 2-chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine (2CdA) in human leukemia cell line MOLT-4 was investigated. 2CdA induced increases of 3'-OH ends of genomic DNA, ladder-like DNA fragmentation and phosphatidylserine translocation to the outer membrane, which are apoptotic characteristics. These apoptotic phenomena induced by 2CdA were inhibited by cycloheximide (CHX; a protein synthesis inhibitor), deoxycytidine (dC; a substrate of deoxycytidine kinase), acetyl Ile-Glu-Thr-Asp aldehyde (Ac-IETD-CHO; a caspase-8 inhibitor) and acetyl Asp-Glu-Val-Asp aldehyde (Ac-DEVD-CHO; a caspase-3 inhibitor). The protein synthesis-dependent expression of Fas and Fas ligand (Fas-L) was detected by treatment with 2CdA. The proteolytic processing of procaspases-8 and -3 to produce active fragments, caspases-8 (p18) and -3 (p17), respectively, was observed after treatment with 2CdA, and suppressed by cycloheximide. Increases in the activities of caspases-8 and -3 were observed after 2CdA treatment. Their activation was also dependent on protein synthesis. These results indicated that 2CdA-induced apoptosis was triggered by phosphorylation of 2CdA followed by the protein synthesis-dependent expression of Fas and Fas-L and activation of caspases-8 and -3.
Leukemia 2000 Feb
PMID:2-Chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine induces apoptosis through the Fas/Fas ligand pathway in human leukemia cell line MOLT-4. 1067 48

Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) induced apoptosis in human hematopoietic U937 cells by itself and in a synergistic manner with tumor necrosis factor (TNF). GM-CSF-induced apoptosis was not inhibited by caspase inhibitors YVAD-CMK, DEVD-CHO and z-VAD-FMK, under the condition that these inhibitors potently suppressed TNF-induced apoptosis. Both GM-CSF and TNF induced caspase 3-like activity in this cell line though the time course was distinct between two cytokines, and combined stimulation of cells with GM-CSF plus TNF induced additive or synergistic activation of caspase 3-like activity. Amount of immunoreactive cleaved forms of caspase 3 recognized by specific antibody was completely dissociated with its enzymatic activity when the cells were stimulated with GM-CSF, but not with TNF. These results indicate that GM-CSF induces apoptosis of U937 cells via unknown pathway, which seems to be mediated by caspase 3-like activity, yet not caspase 3 itself, resistant to the caspase inhibitors, and synergistically interacts with conventional caspase 3 pathway of TNF. Possible involvement of caspases 1 and 8 (-like activity) but not caspase 7 in this pathway was also suggested.
Leukemia 2000 Apr
PMID:Induction of apoptosis in human hematopoietic U937 cells by granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor: possible existence of caspase 3-like pathway. 1076 46

Anthracyclines trigger an apoptotic cell death but their molecular targets are not totally explored. We investigated the apoptotic response of blast cells and lymphocytes from medullary samples of 31 de novo acute leukemia. Mononuclear cells were treated in vitro by therapeutic concentrations of either daunorubicin (DNR) or idarubicin (IDA) for 1 h, washed and cultured for 18 h. A multivariate analysis using flow cytometry and a CD45 gating on lymphocytes and blast cells was performed. DNR and IDA induced a Fas enhancement on both leukemic and normal cells. In blast cells the DEVDases were activated and the caspase 3 was cleaved in relation to phosphatidyl serine exposure, showing a caspase-dependent pathway in anthracycline-induced apoptosis. Apoptotic percentages were always higher for blast cells than for lymphocytes, confirming that anthracycline toxicity mainly affected tumor cells. Moreover, drug-induced apoptosis was not related to spontaneous apoptosis, suggesting that variations in response intensities were due to individual variations of sensitivity rather than to programmed life span time. The apoptotic response of P-glycoprotein-expressing blast cells was not significant, giving biological argument for the poor prognosis of multidrug resistance leukemia. Finally, Fas induction and anthracycline-induced apoptosis on blast cells were significantly higher when a complete remission was achieved, thus shedding light on potential new prognostic factors in acute leukemia.
Leukemia 2000 Jul
PMID:Study of apoptosis-related responses of leukemic blast cells to in vitro anthracycline treatment. 1091 52

Dysfunction of the p53/Bax/caspase-3 apoptosis signaling pathway has been shown to play a role in tumorigenesis and tumor progression, ie the development of acquired drug resistance. Low expression of the apoptosis inducer Bax correlates with poor response to therapy and shorter overall survival in solid tumors. In the present study, we analyzed the p53/Bax/caspase-3 pathway in a paired and an unpaired sample series of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) at initial diagnosis and relapse. The data demonstrate that both Bax expression levels and the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio are significantly lower in samples at relapse as compared with samples at initial diagnosis (P=0.013, Wilcoxon signed rank test (paired samples); P=0.0039, Mann-Whitney U test (unpaired samples)). The loss of Bax protein expression was not a consequence of Bax frameshift mutations of the G8 tract and could not be attributed to mutations of the p53 coding sequence (exons 5 to 8) which were detected to a similar extent in de novo ALL samples and at relapse. Analysis of the downstream effector caspase-3 showed loss of spontaneous caspase-3 processing at relapse. Whereas nine out of 14 (64%, paired samples) or 37 out of 77 (48%, unpaired samples) ALL patients at initial diagnosis displayed spontaneous in vivo processing of caspase-3, this was completely absent in patients at relapse (paired samples) or detected in only one out of 34 patients at relapse (2.9%, unpaired samples). We therefore conclude that in ALL relapse a severe disturbance of apoptotic pathways occurs, both at the level of Bax expression and caspase-3 activation.
Leukemia 2000 Sep
PMID:Relapse in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia is associated with a decrease of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and loss of spontaneous caspase-3 processing in vivo. 1099 7

Arsenic trioxide (As2O3)-treatment is effective in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) patients with t(15;17). Clinically achievable concentrations of As2O3 induce apoptosis in NB4, an APL cell line, in vitro. Here, to study the mechanism of As2O3-induced apoptosis, we established an As2O3-resistant subline, NB4/As. Growth of NB4/As was inhibited by 50% after 2 day-treatment (IC50) at 1.6 microM As2O3, whereas IC50 of NB4 was 0.3 microM. Degradation of PML-RARalpha and change of the PML-subcellular localization were similarly induced by As2O3 in NB4 and NB4/As, suggesting that their contribution to apoptosis is small. Treatment with 1 microM As2O3 induced the activation of caspase 3 as well as a loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (deltapsim) in NB4 but not in NB4/As. Caspase 8 and Bid were also activated by As2O3 in NB4 but not in NB4/As. In NB4, an inhibitor of caspase 8 blocked not only the activation of caspase 3 but also the loss of deltapsim. Neither cell line expressed CD95/Fas, and agonistic anti-Fas antibody (CH-11) failed to cause apoptosis. Neither antagonistic anti-CD95/Fas antibody nor anti-Fas ligand antibodies influenced the As2O3-induced apoptosis. NB4/As had a higher concentration of intracellular glutathione (GSH) than NB4 (96 vs 32 nmol/mg). Reduction of the GSH level by buthionine sulfoxide (BSO) completely restored the sensitivity to As2O3 in NB4/As. Furthermore, caspase activation and the loss of deltapsim were recovered by combination treatment with BSO. These findings suggest that the As2O3 treatment activates caspase 8 in a CD95-independent but GSH concentration-dependent manner. In combination with BSO, As2O3 might be applied to therapy of leukemia/cancers which are insensitive to the clinically achievable concentrations of As2O3.
Leukemia 2000 Oct
PMID:Involvement of CD95-independent caspase 8 activation in arsenic trioxide-induced apoptosis. 1102 49

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are characterized by abnormal growth of committed progenitors in clonogenic assay, with reduced number of colonies and decreased colony/cluster ratio. It has been suggested that excessive apoptosis is the cause of marrow failure in MDS. We studied the expression of caspase-1 (interleukin-1beta-converting enzyme, ICE) and caspase-3 (CPP32/apopain) in marrow mononuclear cells, and the growth pattern of committed progenitors in a series of 83 MDS cases. The percentage of apoptotic cells as detected by TUNEL technique, and the percentage of caspase-3-positive cells were significantly higher in refractory anemia (RA) and RA with ringed sideroblasts (RAS) than in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) and RAEB in transformation (RAEB-T). Spontaneous growth of CFU-GM was associated with a higher percentage of blasts, and with a lower expression of caspase-3 and caspase-1. The yield of CFU-E, BFU-E, and CFU-GM (in the presence of growth factors) was decreased by comparison to normal marrow, but large individual differences were observed in all cytological categories. Inhibition of caspase-1 and caspase-3 activities by specific inhibitors resulted in a significant increase of the production of all types of colonies (up to 50-fold of control). In the presence of caspase-3 inhibitor, the number of BFU-E and CFU-E was in the range of normal values in most cases of RA and RAS. In addition, caspase-1 and -3 protease activities were detectable by fluorogenic assay in all cases studied. Western blot analysis confirmed the expression of caspase-3, including the cleaved (activated)-p17 form in most cases of RA/RAS analyzed. It is concluded that caspase-3 is implicated in the increased apoptosis observed in MDS and that inhibition of its activity can restore at least partially the growth of committed progenitors.
Leukemia 2000 Dec
PMID:Expression and activity of caspases 1 and 3 in myelodysplastic syndromes. 1118 88


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