Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (caspase-3)
45,978 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Genipin is an iridoid compound and an aglucon of geniposide isolated from Gardenia fructus. We have previously reported that genipin induces neurite outgrowth in PC12h and Neuro2a cells and protects against cytotoxicity induced by several conditions such as beta-amyloid peptide, serum deprivation, and oxidative stress in rat primary hippocampal neurons and Neuro2a cells. In this paper, we examined the protective effect of genipin on A23187 (a calcium ionophore)-induced cytotoxicity in Neuro2a cells. A23187 induced cytotoxicity in concentration- and time-dependent manners as assayed by measurements of 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetazolium bromide (MTT) reduction activity and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release. The cytotoxicity was significantly suppressed by genipin in a concentration-dependent manner. A23187 also significantly activated caspase3/7, which is known to be the critical mediator of apoptosis, after 1 h, and the cytotoxicity was clearly blocked by an inhibitor of caspase 3/7. Furthermore, A23187 induced the expression of immunoglobulin-binding protein/glucose-regulated protein of 78 kDa (BiP/GRP78) protein, which is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress marker protein, and the expression was suppressed by genipin. These results suggest that genipin protects Neuro2a cells from A23187-induced cytotoxicity mediated by caspase 3/7 and ER stress. Therefore, genipin may be effective in preventing neurodegeneration observed in Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease involving ER stress.
...
PMID:Genipin suppresses A23187-induced cytotoxicity in neuro2a cells. 1948 12

Curcumin, a naturally occurring yellow pigment isolated from turmeric, is a well known antioxidant with broad spectrum of anti-tumor activities against many human cancer cells. In this study, curcumin-induced cytotoxic effect of mouse-rat hybrid retina ganglion cells (N18) were investigated. For determining cell viability, the trypan blue exclusion and flow cytometric analysis were used. The curcumin-caused cell cycle arrest in N18 cells was examined by flow cytometry. Curcumin affect on the production of reactive oxygen species and Ca2+ and on the decrease of the level of mitochondria membrane potential (DeltaPsim) were also examined by flow cytometry. Curcumin-induced apoptosis was determined by DAPI staining and Western blotting was used for examining the apoptotic signaling proteins. Cell cycle analysis showed that G2/M phase arrest and sub-G1 occurs in N18 cells following 48 h exposure to curcumin. Curcumin also caused a marked increase in apoptosis, as characterized by DNA fragmentation (sub-G1 phase formation) and DAPI staining, and dysfunction of mitochondria, which was associated with the activation of caspase-8, -9 and -3. Curcumin also promoted the levels of Fas and FADD, Bax, cytochrome c release, but decreased the levels of Bcl-2 causing changes of DeltaPsim. Curcumin also induced endoplasmic reticulum stress in N18 cells which was based on the changes of GADD153 and GRP78 and caused Ca2+ release. Curcumin induced apoptosis through the intrinsic pathway and caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways in N18 cells.
...
PMID:Curcumin induces apoptosis through FAS and FADD, in caspase-3-dependent and -independent pathways in the N18 mouse-rat hybrid retina ganglion cells. 1951 10

1,3,8-Trihydroxy-6-methylanthaquinone (emodin) is recognized as an antiproliferative compound. In the present study, however, we show that emodin has both toxic and survival effects in glioma cells and that the survival effects involve Mdr1a. Emodin inhibited the proliferation and induced apoptosis of C6 cells in a 12-h treatment, but C6 cells survived a 72-h drug treatment, indicating resistance to emodin. Emodin-induced apoptosis was reduced by inhibition of the expression and activation of apoptosis-associated proteins including p53, Bax, Bcl-2, Fas, and caspase-3. C6 cells could express antioxidant proteins (superoxide dismutase and catalase) to decrease reactive oxygen species-induced cytotoxicity of emodin and overexpress multidrug resistance genes (Mdr1a, MRP2, MRP3, and MRP6) to decrease the intracellular accumulation of emodin. Electrophoretic mobility shift analysis showed that emodin decreased nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) expression in 24 h of treatment, but in 48 h, emodin increased NF-kappaB activity. A confocal microscope showed that emodin induced NF-kappaB translocation from cytoplasm to nuclei. C6 cells would activate the mitogen-activated protein kinase survival pathway and express the DNA repair gene (MGMT) and associated proteins (PARP and XRCC1) to recover the cell activity. C6 cells also expressed GRP78 to decrease emodin-induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress that would cause apoptosis in C6 cells, and GRP78 inhibited the expression of GADD153 to enhance the expression of Bcl-2 that could balance the ER- and mitochondria-induced apoptosis of C6 cells.
...
PMID:Emodin has cytotoxic and protective effects in rat C6 glioma cells: roles of Mdr1a and nuclear factor kappaB in cell survival. 1954 30

Apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells plays an important role in vascular calcification (VC). However, the potential mechanism remains poorly understood. Previous studies showed that apoptosis mediated by endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS) participates in several diseases with VC. We prepared two rat models of calcification, vitamin D(3) plus nicotine (VDN) and rapid calcification (RC), to investigate whether ERS-mediated apoptosis is activated in VC. TUNEL staining and cleaved caspase 3 protein levels illustrated enhanced apoptosis in calcification groups. Western blot analysis revealed the ERS hallmarks GRP78 and GRP94 increased by 43.9% and 91.7%, respectively, in the VDN group and GRP78 elevated by 84.0% in the RC group (all P<0.05) as compared with controls. Moreover, two molecules of ERS-induced apoptosis, caspase 12 and C/EBP homologous protein, were up-regulated nearly 3-fold (P<0.05) in the VDN group and 10-fold (P<0.01) in the RC group. Our results indicated that ERS-induced apoptosis may be involved in VC, and amelioration of ERS could be a novel strategy to prevent and treat the related diseases.
...
PMID:Endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis is activated in vascular calcification. 1962 43

Calcium ion is a secondary messenger that mediates a variety of physiological responses of neurons, including cell survival responses. To determine the role of calcium in regulating neuronal survival and death, we examined whether chelation of extracellular calcium with EGTA induces caspase-dependent apoptotic cell death and whether glycogen synthase kinase-3 is involved in EGTA-induced cell death in PC12 cells. EGTA increased apoptotic cell death with morphological changes characterized by cell shrinkage and nuclear condensation and fragmentation accompanied by caspase activation. EGTA increased GRP78 protein expression, suggesting that EGTA induces ER stress. Glycogen synthase kinase-3 inhibitors prevented EGTA-induced apoptosis. In addition, nerve growth factor and insulin growth factor-I completely blocked EGTA-induced cell death. Moreover, caspase-3 activation was inhibited by glycogen synthase kinase-3 inhibitors. These results suggest that chelation of extracellular calcium with EGTA induces caspase-dependent apoptosis, and the activation of glycogen synthase kinase-3 is involved in the death of PC12 cells.
...
PMID:Chelation of extracellular calcium-induced cell death was prevented by glycogen synthase kinase-3 inhibitors in PC12 cells. 1968 59

Pancreatic cancer cells are sometimes exposed to stressful microenvironments such as glucose deprivation, hypoxia, and starvation of other nutrients. These stresses, which are characteristic of poorly vascularized solid tumors, activate the unfolded protein response (UPR). The UPR is a stress-signaling pathway present in tumor cells that is associated with molecular chaperone GRP78. Induction of GRP78 has been found to increase cell survival and decrease apoptotic potential through genetic alterations. Thus GRP78 may represent a novel target in the development of anticancer drugs. Here we established a novel screening program to identify chaperone modulators that exhibit preferential cytotoxic activity in glucose-deprived pancreatic cancer cells. During the course of our screening, we isolated an active substance, Ponciri Fructus (PF), from an herbal medicine source and identified it as a down-regulator of GRP78. As expected, PF inhibited expression of the GRP78 protein under glucose-deprivation conditions in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, it induced selective cytotoxicity against glucose-deprived cancer cells; this effect was not observed under normal growth conditions. We also detected apoptotic bodies on Hoechst staining and attempted to determine whether PF-induced apoptosis involved caspase-3 activation. Our results suggest that the GRP78-inhibitory action of PF was dependent on strict hypoglycemic conditions and that it resulted in the selective death of glucose-deprived pancreatic cancer cells.
...
PMID:Selective cytotoxicity of Ponciri Fructus against glucose-deprived PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells via blocking activation of GRP78. 1980 93

A major germacranolide sesquiterpene lactone, deoxyelephantopin, identified from Elephantopus scaber L. (known as "Didancao" in Chinese medicine) showed significant antitumor growth and antimetastatic effect on murine mammary adenocarcinoma TS/A cells in vitro and in vivo in mice. Deoxyelephantopin exhibited a superior effect to that of the paclitaxel in prolonging median survival time of tumor-bearing animals in our recent study. To investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the difference in efficacy between deoxyelephantopin and paclitaxel, we used 2-D DIGE and LC-ESI-MS/MS to profile proteins differentially expressed in the nucleus and cytoplasm of TS/A cells and used the MetaCore database to determine the functional protein networks affected by both treatments. Deoxyelephantopin and paclitaxel treatment produced regulation of molecules involved in proteolysis and calcium ion transport, suggesting the possible effects of both drugs on proteasome and endoplasmic reticulum machinery in TS/A cells. Western blot analysis of marker proteins (e.g., PDI, GRP78, TXND5, caspase-12, caspase-3 and PARP) further verified that induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress was associated with apoptosis induced by both deoxyelephantopin and paclitaxel, but only deoxyelephantopin inhibited proteasomal proteolysis in TS/A cells. The novel effects on targeting ER machinery and suppressing proteasome activity suggest the great potential of deoxyelephantopin for mammary cancer therapy.
...
PMID:Differential proteomic profiling identifies novel molecular targets of paclitaxel and phytoagent deoxyelephantopin against mammary adenocarcinoma cells. 1989 75

MCP-1 (monocyte chemotactic protein-1) plays a critical role in the development of heart failure that is known to involve apoptosis. How MCP-1 contributes to cell death involved in the development of heart disease is not understood. In the present study we show that MCP-1 causes death in cardiac myoblasts, H9c2 cells, by inducing oxidative stress which causes ER stress leading to autophagy via a novel zinc-finger protein, MCPIP (MCP-1-induced protein). MCPIP expression caused cell death, and knockdown of MCPIP attenuated MCP-1-induced cell death. It caused induction of iNOS (inducible NO synthase), translocation of the NADPH oxidase subunit phox47 from the cytoplasm to the membrane, production of ROS (reactive oxygen species), and induction of ER (endoplasmic reticulum) stress markers HSP40 (heat-shock protein 40), PDI (protein disulfide-isomerase), GRP78 (guanine-nucleotide-releasing protein 78) and IRE1alpha (inositol-requiring enzyme 1alpha). It also caused autophagy, as indicated by beclin-1 induction, cleavage of LC3 (microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3) and autophagolysosome formation, and apoptosis, as indicated by caspase 3 activation and TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling) assay. Inhibitors of oxidative stress, including CeO2 nanoparticles, inhibited ROS formation, ER stress, autophagy and cell death. Specific inhibitors of ER stress inhibited autophagy and cell death as did knockdown of the ER stress signalling protein IRE1. Knockdown of beclin-1 and autophagy inhibitors prevented cell death. This cell death involved caspase 2 and caspase 12, as specific inhibitors of these caspases prevented MCPIP-induced cell death. Microarray analysis showed that MCPIP expression caused induction of a variety of genes known to be involved in cell death. MCPIP caused activation of JNK (c-Jun N-terminal kinase) and p38 and induction of p53 and PUMA (p53 up-regulated modulator of apoptosis). Taken together, these results suggest that MCPIP induces ROS/RNS (reactive nitrogen species) production that causes ER stress which leads to autophagy and apoptosis through caspase 2/12 and IRE1alpha-JNK/p38-p53-PUMA pathway. These results provide the first molecular insights into the mechanism by which elevated MCP-1 levels associated with chronic inflammation may contribute to the development of heart failure.
...
PMID:MCP-1 causes cardiomyoblast death via autophagy resulting from ER stress caused by oxidative stress generated by inducing a novel zinc-finger protein, MCPIP. 1992 54

Chronic apoptosis activation may participate in abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) expansion. Statin treatment slows AAA progression independent of cholesterol lowering. We hypothesized that Atorvastatin treatment alters apoptosis protein expression and activation in AAAs. Protein was isolated from the central and distal portions of end-stage human AAA tissue obtained during surgical repair from non-statin (NST) and Atorvastatin-treated (AT) patients. Expression was compared using immunoblots. Bcl-2 expression was unchanged but Bak (4-fold, p < 0.013) and Bax (3-fold, p < 0.035) expression was increased in AT (n = 12) versus NST (n = 15) patients. No cytochrome c release or caspase 3 activation was detected and Clusterin, GRP78, and BNIP1 expression was similar in NST and AT samples. Bcl-2 and Bax cDNA sequences from AAA tissue (n = 10) and the general population were identical. Thus, the increase in Bax and Bak in AT-treated AAAs did not activate the mitochondria or endoplasmic reticulum mediated apoptosis pathways. Bcl-2, Bax, and Bak have non-apoptosis related functions that include maintenance of endoplasmic reticulum (ER), homeostasis, and adaptation to stress. We speculate that Atorvastatin-mediated increases in Bax and Bak may positively affect their non-apoptosis related cell functions to account for the beneficial effect of statins to slow AAA expansion.
...
PMID:Atorvastatin mediates increases in intralesional BAX and BAK expression in human end-stage abdominal aortic aneurysms. 1993 99

The excessive supply of fatty acids to the liver contributes to hepatic insulin resistance and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress associated with obesity or type 2 diabetes mellitus. Furthermore, excess and/or prolonged ER stress contributes to hepatic cell death deteriorating nonalcoholic fatty liver disease to steatohepatitis. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of metformin on palmitate-induced ER stress and hepatic insulin resistance in HepG2 cells. Metformin significantly inhibited palmitate-induced cell death and apoptosis via caspase-3 activation. Metformin also blocked the induction of ER stress proteins (GRP78, Chop, Cleaved ATF-6, p-eIF2 alpha and XBP-1) and regulated serine phosphorylation of IRS-1. Metformin may therefore protect hepatocytes from death induced by saturated fatty acids. These data may also provide a further rationale for exploring the use of metformin in the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, revealing its blocking effect for hepatic insulin resistance evoked by saturated fatty acids.
...
PMID:Metformin regulates palmitate-induced apoptosis and ER stress response in HepG2 liver cells. 2003 65


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>