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 shown that Smac/DIABLO release from mitochondria appears to be the principal pathway by which TRAIL induces apoptosis of human melanoma. We report that TRAIL-induced release of Smac/DIABLO appears to be downregulated by concomitant signaling through the MEK Erk1/2 kinase pathway and that this inhibits TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Inhibition of Erk1/2 signaling by either the MEK inhibitor U0126 or a dominant-negative mutant of MKK1 markedly sensitized melanoma cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. The site in the apoptotic pathway acted on by U0126 appeared to be downstream of caspase-8 and Bid but upstream of caspase-3 in that the levels of proteolytic cleavage of caspase-8 and Bid by TRAIL were similar in cells with or without exposure to U0126. Caspase-3 activation and cleavage of its substrates, PARP, ICAD and XIAP, were however increased by cotreatment with U0126. This was associated with a rapid reduction in mitochondrial transmembrane potential (MMP) and increased release of Smac/DIABLO into the cytosol. Exploration of events leading to the changes in MMP revealed an increased translocation of Bax from the cytosol to mitochondria in the presence of U0126. There was also a delayed decrease in the levels of expression of Mcl-1. Bcl-2 and Bcl-X(L). Over expression of Bcl-2 blocked TRAIL-induced apoptosis in the presence of U0126. Cytochrome c appeared not to play a major role in sensitization of melanoma to TRAIL in that caspase-9 activation was not detected in most of the cell lines. These results suggest that Erk1/2 signaling may protect melanoma cells against TRAIL-induced apoptosis by inhibiting the relocation of Bax from the cytosol to mitochondria and that this may reduce TRAIL-mediated release of Smac/DIABLO and induction of apoptosis.
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PMID:Activation of ERK1/2 protects melanoma cells from TRAIL-induced apoptosis by inhibiting Smac/DIABLO release from mitochondria. 1277 38

TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL APO-2L) is a member of the TNF family and induces apoptosis in cancer cells without affecting most non-neoplastic cells. The present investigation is focused on apoptosis induction by combined exposure to TRAIL and ionising radiation (IR) in human renal cell carcinoma (RCC) cell lines. Here, we demonstrate that all RCC cell lines coexpress TRAIL and the death-inducing receptors, TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2. Exposure to TRAIL alone induced marked apoptosis in three out of eight RCC cell lines. Combined exposure to TRAIL and IR resulted in a sensitisation to TRAIL-induced apoptosis in one RCC cell line only. Enhanced apoptosis induction by TRAIL in combination with IR was paralleled by an increase in PARP cleavage and activation of executioner caspase-3, whereas caspases-6 and -7 were not involved. Moreover, exposure to TRAIL and/or IR resulted in a marked activation of initiator caspase-8, possibly augmented by the observed reduction of inhibitory c-FLIP expression. In contrast to other tumour types, activation of initiator caspase-9 was not detectable in our RCC model system after exposure to TRAIL and/or IR. This lack of caspase-9 activation might be related to an impaired 'crosstalk' with the caspase-8 pathway as suggested by the missing Bid cleavage and to the appearance of an XIAP cleavage product known to inhibit caspase-9 activation. Deficient activation of caspase-9, therefore, might contribute to the clinically known resistance of human RCC against IR and also argues against an effective combination therapy with TRAIL and IR in this tumour type.
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PMID:Apoptosis induction in renal cell carcinoma by TRAIL and gamma-radiation is impaired by deficient caspase-9 cleavage. 1277 98

Mast cells are known to play an important role in inflammation and host defense. Recent evidence suggests that mast cells may also participate in immune surveillance against cancer cells. In this study, we demonstrate that human mast cells are able to trigger apoptosis in Jurkat T leukemia cells. Fragmentation of Jurkat cell DNA was detectable by JAM assay within 4 h of exposure to HMC-1 mast cells or cultured human cord blood-derived mast cells. HMC-1 mast cells that were fixed with paraformaldehyde retained the ability to induce apoptosis in Jurkat cells while cell-free conditioned supernatants from HMC-1 cell cultures failed to elicit DNA fragmentation, suggesting that mast cells mediate anti-tumor activity via a cell-surface molecule. Surprisingly, the apoptosis-inducing activity of HMC-1 mast cells was not mediated by known tumor necrosis factor (TNF) superfamily members (TNF-alpha, Fas ligand, TRAIL, TWEAK), nor did the fragmentation of Jurkat cell DNA by mast cells require the activity of caspase-3, -8, or -9. Collectively, these data indicate that mast cells trigger caspase-independent apoptosis in leukemic cells via a novel cell-surface molecule, and are consistent with a role for mast cells as anti-tumor effector cells.
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PMID:Human mast cells induce caspase-independent DNA fragmentation in leukemic T cells. 1279 63

The second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase, Smac, is an apoptosis-related protein. Smac releases inhibition of the IAP family from caspase-3 to induce apoptosis. Smac is expressed in some malignant tumor cells and is released from mitochondria into the cytosol after death receptor stimulation to promote apoptosis of tumor cells. In this study, we found down-regulated Smac protein expression in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissues, compared to that in non-tumor hepatic tissues. Simultaneously, caspase-3 expression also decreased in HCC tissues. HCC cell lines did not undergo apoptosis after TRAIL stimulation, although Smac was expressed in these HCC cells. Ectopic Smac alone did not induce cell death, but could sensitize HCC cells to TRAIL stimulation. With over-expression of Smac in HCC cells, TRAIL induced by 10% HCC cell death. The role of Smac in apoptosis signaling pathway in HCC cells warrants further study.
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PMID:Over-expression of Smac promotes TRAIL-induced cell death in human hepatocellular carcinoma. 1279 4

TRAIL is a cytokine with a unique ability to induce apoptosis selectively in many transformed cell lines. The instability of TRAIL and the resistance of some cancer cells to TRAIL present the main obstacles for clinical experimentation. We generated an adenovirus expressing full-length TRAIL and tested its efficacy in several cancer cell lines. Ad-TRAIL-infected cancer cells localized full-length TRAIL protein to the cytoplasm and released same-sized TRAIL in the media. Ad-TRAIL was found to induce apoptotic cell death in several cancer cell lines resistant to soluble TRAIL (A549, SKOV3, HT-29 and LNCap) and in TRAIL-sensitive cell lines. Ad-TRAIL, but not soluble TRAIL, induced apoptotic cell death in TRAIL-resistant cell lines, manifested by an increased sub-G1 proportion, caspase-3 activation and PARP cleavage. Ad-TRAIL also induced a media-transferable bystander effect, but only in soluble TRAIL-sensitive cell lines. In conclusion, two novel characteristics of ad-TRAIL were found during this study. First, that ad-TRAIL can induce apoptotic cell death in several cancer cell lines resistant to sTRAIL. Second, that ad-TRAIL induces a media-transferable bystander effect, which is expected to increase its therapeutic value by allowing TRAIL to overcome the locally acting nature and low transduction rate commonly encountered in clinical situation.
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PMID:Adenovirus-TRAIL can overcome TRAIL resistance and induce a bystander effect. 1283 34

Human hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) show resistance to apoptosis mediated by several death receptors. Because cellular FLICE/caspase-8-inhibitory protein (cFLIP) is a recently identified intracellular inhibitor of caspase-8 activation that potently inhibits death signaling mediated by all known death receptors, including Fas, TNF-receptor (TNF-R), and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand receptors (TRAIL-Rs), we investigated the expression and function of cFLIP in human HCCs. We found that cFLIP is constitutively expressed in all human HCC cell lines and is expressed more in human HCC tissues than in nontumor liver tissues. Metabolic inhibitors, actinomycin D (ActD) or cycloheximide (CHX), dramatically rendered HCC cells sensitive to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Neither caspase-8 nor caspase-3 was activated by agonistic anti-Fas antibody alone, but both caspases were activated by Fas stimulation in the presence of ActD or CHX, indicating the importance of caspase-8 inhibitors that are sensitive to metabolic inhibitors. Actually, cFLIP expression was decreased in ActD or CHX treatment. cFLIP down-regulation induced by cFLIP antisense oligodeoxynucleotides sensitized HLE cells to Fas, TNF-R, and TRAIL-R-mediated apoptosis. Furthermore, cFLIP over-expression activated nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB and cFLIP down-regulation attenuated NF-kappaB activation induced by TNF-alpha or TRAIL. Pretreatment with pan-caspase-inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp (OMe) fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD-fmk), restored NF-kappaB activity attenuated by cFLIP down-regulation. cFLIP expression was increased by TNF-alpha, TRAIL, or vascular endothelial growth factor but decreased by wortmannin, indicating that cFLIP expression is regulated by both the NF-kappaB and phosphatidylinostiol-3 kinase (PI-3)/Akt pathways. These results suggest that cFLIP plays an important role in cell survival not simply by inhibiting death-receptor-mediated apoptosis but also by regulating NF-kappaB activation in human HCCs.
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PMID:Cellular FLICE/caspase-8-inhibitory protein as a principal regulator of cell death and survival in human hepatocellular carcinoma. 1286 Oct 43

We have previously demonstrated the anti-tumor activity of nitrosylcobalamin (NO-Cbl), an analog of vitamin B12 that delivers nitric oxide (NO) and increases the expression of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (Apo2L/TRAIL) and its receptors in human tumors. The specific aim of this study was to examine whether NO-Cbl could sensitize drug-resistant melanomas to Apo2L/TRAIL. Antiproliferative effects of NO-Cbl and Apo2L/TRAIL were assessed in malignant melanomas and non-tumorigenic melanocyte and fibroblast cell lines. Athymic nude mice bearing human melanoma A375 xenografts were treated with NO-Cbl and Apo2L/TRAIL. Apoptosis was measured by TUNEL and confirmed by examining levels and activity of key mediators of apoptosis. The activation status of NF-kappa B was established by assaying DNA binding, luciferase reporter activity, the phosphorylation status of I kappa B alpha, and in vitro IKK activity. NO-Cbl sensitized Apo2L/TRAIL-resistant melanoma cell lines to growth inhibition by Apo2L/TRAIL but had minimal effect on normal cell lines. NO-Cbl and Apo2L/TRAIL exerted synergistic anti-tumor activity against A375 xenografts. Treatment with NO-Cbl followed by Apo2L/TRAIL induced apoptosis in Apo2L/TRAIL-resistant tumor cells, characterized by cleavage of caspase-3, caspase-8, and PARP. NO-Cbl inhibited IKK activation, characterized by decreased phosphorylation of I kappa B alpha and inhibition of NF-kappa B DNA binding activity. NO-Cbl suppressed Apo2L/TRAIL- and TNF-alpha-mediated activation of a transfected NF-kappa B-driven luciferase reporter. XIAP, an inhibitor of apoptosis, was inactivated by NO-Cbl. NO-Cbl treatment rendered Apo2L/TRAIL-resistant malignancies sensitive to the anti-tumor effects of Apo2L/TRAIL in vitro and in vivo. The use of NO-Cbl and Apo2L/TRAIL capitalizes on the tumor-specific properties of both agents and represents a promising anti-cancer combination.
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PMID:Suppression of NF-kappa B survival signaling by nitrosylcobalamin sensitizes neoplasms to the anti-tumor effects of Apo2L/TRAIL. 3178 79

We have further examined the mechanism by which phorbol ester-mediated protein kinase C (PKC) activation protects against tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced cytotoxicity. We now report that activation of PKC targets death receptor signaling complex formation. Pre-treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (PMA) led to inhibition of TRAIL-induced apoptosis in HeLa cells, which was characterized by a reduction in phosphatidylserine (PS) externalization, decreased caspase-8 processing, and incomplete maturation and activation of caspase-3. These effects of PMA were completely abrogated by the PKC inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide I (Bis I), clearly implicating PKC in the protective effect of PMA. TRAIL-induced mitochondrial release of the apoptosis mediators cytochrome c and Smac was blocked by PMA. This, together with the observed decrease in Bid cleavage, suggested that PKC activation modulates apical events in TRAIL signaling upstream of mitochondria. This was confirmed by analysis of TRAIL death-inducing signaling complex formation, which was disrupted in PMA-treated cells as evidenced by a marked reduction in Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) recruitment, an effect that could not be explained by any change in FADD phosphorylation state. In an in vitro binding assay, the intracellular domains of both TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 bound FADD: activation of PKC significantly inhibited this interaction suggesting that PKC may be targeting key apical components of death receptor signaling. Significantly, this effect was not confined to TRAIL, because isolation of the native TNF receptor signaling complex revealed that PKC activation also inhibited TNF receptor-associated death domain protein recruitment to TNF-R1 and TNF-induced phosphorylation of IkappaB-alpha. Taken together, these results show that PKC activation specifically inhibits the recruitment of key obligatory death domain-containing adaptor proteins to their respective membrane-associated signaling complexes, thereby modulating TRAIL-induced apoptosis and TNF-induced NF-kappaB activation, respectively.
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PMID:Protein kinase C modulates tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced apoptosis by targeting the apical events of death receptor signaling. 1292 Jan 12

Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) remains a deadly disease for most adult patients, due primarily to the emergence of chemoresistant cells. Defects in apoptosis pathways make important contributions to chemoresistance, suggesting a need to restore apoptosis sensitivity or to identify alternative pathways for apoptosis induction. Triterpenoids represent a class of naturally occurring and synthetic compounds with demonstrated antitumor activity, including 2-cyano-3,12-dioxoolean-1,9-dien-28-oic acid (CDDO) and its methyl ester (CDDO-m). We explored the effects of CDDO and CDDO-m in vitro on established AML cell lines (HL-60, U937, AML-2) and on freshly isolated AML blasts. CDDO and CDDO-m reduced the viability of all AML cell lines tested in a dose-dependent manner, with effective doses for killing 50% of cells (ED(50)) within 48 h of approximately 1 and 0.5 muM, respectively. CDDO or CDDO-m also induced substantial increases in cell death in five out of 10 samples of primary AML blasts. Cell death induced by CDDO and CDDO-m was attributed to apoptosis, based on characteristic cell morphology and evidence of caspase activation. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated proteolytic processing of caspase-3, -7, and -8, but not caspase-9, suggesting the involvement of the 'extrinsic' pathway, linked to apoptosis induction by TNF-family death receptors. Accordingly, CDDO and CDDO-m induced concentration-dependent reductions in the levels of FLIP protein, an endogenous antagonist of caspase-8, without altering the levels of several other apoptosis-relevant proteins. Reductions in FLIP were rapid, detectable within 3 h after exposure of AML cell lines to CDDO or CDDO-m. CDDO and CDDO-m also sensitized two of four leukemia lines to TRAIL, a TNF-family death ligand. The findings suggest that synthetic triterpenoids warrant further investigation in the treatment of AML, alone or in combination with TRAIL or other immune-based therapies.
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PMID:Synthetic triterpenoids activate a pathway for apoptosis in AML cells involving downregulation of FLIP and sensitization to TRAIL. 1293 Dec 20

Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (Apo2L/TRAIL) belongs to the family of programmed cell death-inducing cytokines. Apo2L/TRAIL induces apoptosis in a wide variety of tumor cells. Tumor cells that are resistant to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis can be sensitized by chemotherapeutic drugs and other agents via an unknown mechanism. Here we report that PG490 (triptolide), a diterpene triepoxide extracted from the Chinese herb Tripterygium wilfordii and used in traditional Chinese medicine, sensitizes lung cancer but not normal human bronchial epithelial cells to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Sensitization was accompanied by caspase-3 and caspase-8 activation, whereas no cleavage of caspase-9 was observed. Determination of cell surface receptors by flow cytometry demonstrated no difference in Apo2L/TRAIL-R1 and -R2 expression, the two receptors with functional death domains, between resistant and sensitized cells. In cells treated with the combination of Apo2L/TRAIL and PG490, we observed activation of ERK2, a member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase family. Furthermore, sensitization could be blocked by the ERK inhibitor U0126 but not the p38 inhibitor SB203580, suggesting that activation of ERK2 is required for this effect. In addition, sensitization of lung cancer cells was also seen in ex vivo culture of lung cancer tissue from four patients who underwent surgery. Immunohistochemical staining showed a clear reduction in proliferation cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in tissue treated with Apo2L/TRAIL and PG490. In conclusion, apoptosis induced by the combination of Apo2L/TRAIL and PG490 warrants further evaluation as a potential new strategy for the treatment of lung cancer.
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PMID:PG490-mediated sensitization of lung cancer cells to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis requires activation of ERK2. 1293 2


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