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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dysregulation of CD95/Fas-mediated apoptosis has been implicated as a contributing factor in autoimmune disorders. Animal studies clearly have established a connection between
mercury
exposure and autoimmune disease in rodents, while case reports have suggested a link between accidental
mercury
contamination and autoimmune disease in humans. The mechanism(s) for these associations are poorly understood. Using the Jurkat cell model, we have found that low levels (</=10 microM) of inorganic
mercury
(i.e., HgCl2) attenuated anti-CD95-mediated growth arrest and markedly enhanced cell survival. Several biochemical assays for apoptosis, including DNA degradation, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase degradation, and phosphatidylserine externalization, directly verified that HgCl2 attenuated anti-CD95-mediated apoptosis. In an attempt to further characterize the effect of
mercury
on CD95-mediated apoptosis, several signaling components of the CD95 death pathway were analyzed to determine whether HgCl2 could modulate them. HgCl2 did not modulate CD95 expression; however, it did block CD95-induced
caspase-3
activation. HgCl2 was not able to attenuate TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis in U-937 cells, or ceramide-C6-mediated apoptosis in Jurkat cells, suggesting that
mercury
acts upstream of, or does not involve, these signals. Thus, inorganic
mercury
specifically attenuates CD95-mediated apoptosis likely by targeting a signaling component that is upstream of
caspase-3
activation and downstream of CD95.
...
PMID:Protection against CD95-mediated apoptosis by inorganic mercury in Jurkat T cells. 1035 62
Metallothionein (MT) is a low-molecular-weight, sulfhydryl-rich, metal-binding protein that can protect against the toxicity of cadmium,
mercury
, and copper. However, the role of MT in arsenic (As)-induced toxicity is less certain. To better define the ability of MT to modify As toxicity, MT-I/II knockout (MT-null) mice and the corresponding wild-type mice (WT) were exposed to arsenite [As(III)] or arsenate [As(V)] either through the drinking water for 48 weeks, or through repeated sc injections (5 days/week) for 15 weeks. Chronic As exposure increased tissue MT concentrations (2-5-fold) in the WT but not in MT-null mice. Arsenic by both routes produced damage to the liver (fatty infiltration, inflammation, and focal necrosis) and kidney (tubular cell vacuolization, inflammatory cell infiltration, and interstitial fibrosis) in both MT-null and WT mice. However, in MT-null mice, the pathological lesions were more frequent and severe when compared to WT mice. This was confirmed biochemically, in that, at the higher oral doses of As, blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels were increased more in MT-null mice (60%) than in WT mice (30%). Chronic As exposures produced 2-10 fold elevation of serum interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels, with greater increases seen by repeated injections than by oral exposure, and again, MT-null mice had higher serum cytokines than WT mice after As exposure. Repeated As injections also decreased hepatic glutathione (GSH) by 35%, but GSH-peroxidase and GSH-reductase were minimally affected. MT-null mice were more sensitive than WT mice to the effect of GSH depletion by As(V). Hepatic
caspase-3
activity was increased (2-3-fold) in both WT and MT-null mice, indicative of apoptotic cell death. In summary, chronic inorganic As exposure produced injuries to multiple organs, and MT-null mice are generally more susceptible than WT mice to As-induced toxicity regardless of route of exposure, suggesting that MT could be a cellular factor in protecting against chronic As toxicity.
...
PMID:Metallothionein-I/II null mice are more sensitive than wild-type mice to the hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic effects of chronic oral or injected inorganic arsenicals. 1082 79
The major source of thimerosal (ethyl
mercury
thiosalicylate) exposure is childhood vaccines. It is believed that the children are exposed to significant accumulative dosage of thimerosal during the first 2 years of life via immunization. Because of health-related concerns for exposure to
mercury
, we examined the effects of thimerosal on the biochemical and molecular steps of mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis in Jurkat T cells. Thimerosal and not thiosalcylic acid (non-
mercury
component of thimerosal), in a concentration-dependent manner, induced apoptosis in T cells as determined by TUNEL and propidium iodide assays, suggesting a role of
mercury
in T cell apoptosis. Apoptosis was associated with depolarization of mitochondrial membrane, release of cytochrome c and apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) from the mitochondria, and activation of caspase-9 and
caspase-3
, but not of caspase-8. In addition, thimerosal in a concentration-dependent manner inhibited the expression of XIAP, cIAP-1 but did not influence cIAP-2 expression. Furthermore, thimerosal enhanced intracellular reactive oxygen species and reduced intracellular glutathione (GSH). Finally, exogenous glutathione protected T cells from thimerosal-induced apoptosis by upregulation of XIAP and cIAP1 and by inhibiting activation of both caspase-9 and
caspase-3
. These data suggest that thimerosal induces apoptosis in T cells via mitochondrial pathway by inducing oxidative stress and depletion of GSH.
...
PMID:Biochemical and molecular basis of thimerosal-induced apoptosis in T cells: a major role of mitochondrial pathway. 1214 Jul 45
Mercurial compounds modulate immunologic functions by inducing cytotoxicity. Although
mercury
chloride (HgCl(2)) is known to induce apoptosis in various immune system cells, the mechanism of the induction of apoptosis is poorly understood. In this study, we examined the activation of
caspase-3
, an important cysteine aspartic protease, during HgCl(2)-induced apoptosis in a human leukemia cell line (HL-60 cells). Both DNA fragmentation, a characteristic of apoptotic cells, and proteolysis of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), a substrate of
caspase-3
, occurred at 6 h after HgCl(2) treatment in HL-60 cells. These results suggest that the activation of
caspase-3
was involved in HgCl(2)-induced apoptosis. The release of cytochrome c (Cyt c) from mitochondria into the cytosol, which is an initiator of the activation of caspase cascades, was also observed in HgCl(2)-treated HL-60 cells. Moreover, the release of Cyt c from mitochondria was observed in HgCl(2)-treated mitochondria isolated from mice liver, and this was followed by mitochondrial permeability transition (PT). The PT was inhibited by cyclosporin A (CsA), a potent inhibitor of PT. CsA also suppressed the occurrence of DNA fragmentation induced by HgCl(2) treatment in HL-60 cells. Taken together, these findings indicate that HgCl(2) is a potent inducer of apoptosis via Cyt c release from the mitochondria in HL-60 cells.
...
PMID:Mercuric chloride induces apoptosis via a mitochondrial-dependent pathway in human leukemia cells. 1250 71
The current study characterizes the mechanism by which
mercury
, a toxic metal, induces death in murine macrophages. The cytotoxic EC(50) of
mercury
ranged from 62.7 to 81.1 microM by various assays in J774A.1 cultures; accordingly, we employed 70 microM of mercuric chloride in most experiments.
Mercury
-induced intracellular calcium modulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, which resulted in both cell apoptosis and necrosis indicated by annexin V binding and
caspase-3
activity, and propidium-iodide binding. Calcium antagonists abolished ROS production.
Mercury
stimulated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and additively stimulated lipopolysaccharide-activated p38.
Mercury
-activated p38 was decreased by pretreatment of cells with antioxidants, N-acetylcysteine (NAC) and silymarin, indicating that
mercury
-induced ROS were involved in p38 activation.
Mercury
increased the expression of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha); antioxidants and a specific p38 inhibitor decreased this effect. Pretreatment with antioxidants, p38 inhibitor, and anti-TNFalpha antibody decreased
mercury
-induced necrosis; however, anti-TNFalpha antibody did not decrease
mercury
-induced apoptosis. Results suggest that
mercury
-induced macrophage death is a mix of apoptosis and necrosis employing different pathways. P38-mediated caspase activation regulates
mercury
-induced apoptosis and p38-mediated TNFalpha regulates necrosis in these cells. Calcium regulates ROS production and
mercury
-induced ROS modulate downstream p38 that regulates both apoptosis and necrosis.
...
PMID:Mercury-induced apoptosis and necrosis in murine macrophages: role of calcium-induced reactive oxygen species and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling. 1505 Apr 7
Mercury
and aluminum are considered to be neurotoxic metals, and they are often connected with the onset of neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, mercuric
mercury
, methylmercury and aluminum were studied in three different cell lines of neural origin. To evaluate the effects, mitochondrial cytotoxicity and apoptosis induced by the metals were measured after various incubation times. SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma, U 373MG glioblastoma, and RPE D407 retinal pigment epithelial cells were subcultured to appropriate cell culture plates and 0.01-1,000 microM concentrations of methylmercury, mercuric and aluminum chloride were added into the growth medium. In the assay measuring the mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity, WST-1, the cultures were exposed for 15 min, 24 or 48 h before measurement. Cells were allowed to recover from the exposure in part of the study. Apoptosis induced by the metals was measured after 6-, 24- and 48-h exposure times with the determination of activated
caspase 3
enzyme. Mitochondrial assays showed a clear dose-response and exposure time-response to the metals. The most toxic was methylmercury (EC50 ~0.8 microM, 48 h), and the most sensitive cell line was the neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y. Furthermore, there was marked mitochondrial activation, especially in connection with aluminum and methylmercury at low concentrations. This activation may be important during the initiation of cellular processes. All the metals tested induced apoptosis, but with a different time-course and cell-line specificity. In microscopic photographs, glioblastoma cells formed fibrillary tangles, and neuroblastoma cells settled along the fibrilles in cocultures of glial and neuronal cell lines during aluminum exposure. The study emphasized the toxicity of methylmercury to neural cells and showed that aluminum alters various cellular activities.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial viability and apoptosis induced by aluminum, mercuric mercury and methylmercury in cell lines of neural origin. 1515 Jun 81
Exposure to environmental
mercury
may be a factor that contributes to idiosyncratic autoimmune disease. Studies have demonstrated that inorganic, ionic
mercury
(i.e., Hg2+) modulates several lymphocyte signal transduction pathways, which may be a mechanism whereby Hg2+ dysregulates the immune response. The CD95/Fas apoptotic signaling pathway, which is of critical importance in regulating peripheral tolerance, is disrupted by low and environmentally relevant concentrations of Hg2+. Activation of the cysteine protease
caspase-3
is a critical component of both CD95-mediated and TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis. The present work demonstrates that Hg2+ selectively disrupts death receptor mediated
caspase-3
activation, where CD95-mediated
caspase-3
activation is impaired in Hg2+ treated cells; whereas TNF-alpha-induced
caspase-3
activation is not. Using the fluorogenic
caspase-3
substrate, Ac-DEVD-7-amino-4-methyl coumarin, to measure
caspase-3
enzyme activity as well as Western blotting to track processing of the
caspase-3
proenzyme, we have considered the potential direct and indirect effects of Hg2+ on
caspase-3
. At relatively high concentrations and in a cell-free system, Hg2+ is capable of targeting the active site cysteinyl of
caspase-3
resulting in enzyme inhibition. However, at more environmentally relevant exposures, Hg2+ does not gain access in appreciable quantities to the intracellular compartment where
caspase-3
resides. Collectively, these data establish that Hg2+ impairs CD95-mediated apoptosis by targeting a plasma membrane proximal signaling event. By measuring the cellular Hg2+ content following various exposure conditions, we have determined that a cellular Hg2+ burden of approximately 50 ng/10(6) cells is sufficient to impair CD95-mediated
caspase-3
activation. The present study furthers an understanding of the mechanism whereby relatively low and non-cytotoxic concentrations of Hg2+ may disrupt peripheral tolerance leading to sustained autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:Attenuation of CD95-induced apoptosis by inorganic mercury: caspase-3 is not a direct target of low levels of Hg2+. 1558 71
Two protein signaling systems, phosphorylation and S-nitrosylation, influence most aspects of cellular physiology. S-nitrosylation, which generates a nitrosothiol linkage on cysteine residues, is caused by nitric oxide (NO). NO is believed to act as an anti-apoptotic agent by inhibiting caspase activity in cardiomyocytes, but there is little direct evidence for this. We investigated whether apoptosis inhibition by NO involved S-nitrosylation of caspases in doxorubicin (DOX)-induced myocardial apoptosis. Cardiomyocytes were treated with 1 micromol/l of DOX to induce apoptosis. Pretreatment with an NO donor, S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) reduced the apoptosis. This effect was attenuated by treatment with 100 micromol/l of
mercury
dichloride (HgCl2), which is an agent of denitrosylation. After 24 h DOX-treatment, SNAP reduced the increased
caspase-3
activity by 63%, and this effect was reversed by treatment with HgCl2. Immunoblot analysis showed that accumulation of the cleaved
caspase-3
protein, an active form that induces apoptosis was inhibited significantly by SNAP. To elucidate nitrosothiol formation on
caspase-3
by NO, we did several experiments. First, we prepared an immunoprecipitate of
caspase-3
and measured the concentration of NO released from the precipitated complex by HgCl2. Second, S-nitrosylated proteins, purified by immunoprecipitation of
caspase-3
, were biotinylated and the biotin concentration was estimated by immunoblotting. Third, dual immunofluorescent staining was done with antibodies for S-nitrosocysteine and
caspase-3
. Results showed that formation of nitrosothiol in
caspase-3
in DOX-treated cardiomyocytes with SNAP was increased significantly compared with untreated cardiomyocytes. We reported here that exogenous NO produces an anti-apoptotic effect by suppression of caspase activity via S-nitrosylation in cardiomyocytes.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide inhibits myocardial apoptosis by preventing caspase-3 activity via S-nitrosylation. 1562 33
Environmental exposure to mercurials continues to be a public health issue due to their deleterious effects on immune, renal and neurological function. Recently the safety of thimerosal, an ethyl
mercury
-containing preservative used in vaccines, has been questioned due to exposure of infants during immunization. Mercurials have been reported to cause apoptosis in cultured neurons; however, the signaling pathways resulting in cell death have not been well characterized. Therefore, the objective of this study was to identify the mode of cell death in an in vitro model of thimerosal-induced neurotoxicity, and more specifically, to elucidate signaling pathways which might serve as pharmacological targets. Within 2 h of thimerosal exposure (5 microM) to the human neuroblastoma cell line, SK-N-SH, morphological changes, including membrane alterations and cell shrinkage, were observed. Cell viability, assessed by measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity in the medium, as well as the 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay, showed a time- and concentration-dependent decrease in cell survival upon thimerosal exposure. In cells treated for 24 h with thimerosal, fluorescence microscopy indicated cells undergoing both apoptosis and oncosis/necrosis. To identify the apoptotic pathway associated with thimerosal-mediated cell death, we first evaluated the mitochondrial cascade, as both inorganic and organic mercurials have been reported to accumulate in the organelle. Cytochrome c was shown to leak from the mitochondria, followed by caspase 9 cleavage within 8 h of treatment. In addition, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) was cleaved to form a 85 kDa fragment following maximal
caspase 3
activation at 24 h. Taken together these findings suggest deleterious effects on the cytoarchitecture by thimerosal and initiation of mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial mediated thimerosal-induced apoptosis in a human neuroblastoma cell line (SK-N-SH). 1586 95
There is a worldwide increasing concern over the neurological risks of thimerosal (ethylmercury thiosalicylate) which is an organic
mercury
compound that is commonly used as an antimicrobial preservative. In this study, we show that thimerosal, at nanomolar concentrations, induces neuronal cell death through the mitochondrial pathway. Thimerosal, in a concentration- and time-dependent manner, decreased cell viability as assessed by calcein-ethidium staining and caused apoptosis detected by Hoechst 33258 dye. Thimerosal-induced apoptosis was associated with depolarization of mitochondrial membrane, generation of reactive oxygen species, and release of cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) from mitochondria to cytosol. Although thimerosal did not affect cellular expression of Bax at the protein level, we observed translocation of Bax from cytosol to mitochondria. Finally, caspase-9 and
caspase-3
were activated in the absence of caspase-8 activation. Our data suggest that thimerosal causes apoptosis in neuroblastoma cells by changing the mitochondrial microenvironment.
...
PMID:Thimerosal induces neuronal cell apoptosis by causing cytochrome c and apoptosis-inducing factor release from mitochondria. 1627 74
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