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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Viral FLICE-inhibitory proteins (v-FLIPs) encoded by several herpesviruses and poxviruses share the ability to inhibit apoptosis after engagement of death receptors. In the current article, we provide insights into the mechanisms by which the v-
FLIP
of human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) (also referred to as Kaposi's sarcoma-associated virus) protects cells from apoptosis after Fas-induced signaling. Using v-
FLIP
expression vectors, our results clearly show that HHV-8 v-
FLIP
reduces the cleavage of procaspase-8 into its active p18 and p10 protease subunits upon Fas-induced cell death. These results were confirmed by lower caspase-8 and
caspase-3
protease activities in extracts of HeLa cells expressing HHV-8 v-
FLIP
. Coimmunoprecipitation studies further indicate that HHV-8 v-
FLIP
physically interacts with procaspase-8, but not with Fas-associated protein with death domain in the cellular cytoplasm. These results suggest that binding of HHV-8 v-
FLIP
to procaspase-8 affects the recruitment and the activation of the latter at the death-induced signaling complex, resulting in diminished apoptotic cascade initiation. Because cellular
FLIP
was recently reported to modulate promoter containing NF-kappaB motifs and that both HHV-8 and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HWV-1) can infect monocytes, we studied the effects of v-
FLIP
on HIV-1 gene expression. Cotransfection experiments indicated that v-
FLIP
expression is associated with activation of HIV long terminal repeats: events that were strictly dependent on the presence of NF-kappaB consensus elements. In conclusion, HHV-8 v-
FLIP
can possibly contribute to the pathogenesis of both HHV-8 and HIV-1 through impaired Fas-dependent killing of infected cells by cytotoxic T cells and through activation of HIV gene expression.
...
PMID:Human herpesvirus 8 viral FLICE-inhibitory protein inhibits Fas-mediated apoptosis through binding and prevention of procaspase-8 maturation. 1143 16
The anti-HIV agent MAP30 (Momordica anti-HIV protein, 30 kDa) inhibits the proliferation of BC-2, an AIDS-related primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) cell line derived from an AIDS patient. BC-2 cells are latently infected with Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV), also known as human herpes virus 8 (HHV8). We examined the effect of MAP30 on the expression of viral and cellular genes in BC-2 during latent and lytic states of the viral life cycle. By Northern analysis and RT-PCR, we found that MAP30 downregulates the expression of viral cyclin D (vCD), viral interleukin-6 (vIL-6), and viral
FLIP
(vFLIP), genes involved in cell cycle regulation, viral pathogenesis, and apoptosis. By pathway-specific cDNA microarray analysis, we found that BC-2 cells express high levels of egr-1, ATF-2, hsp27, hsp90, IkappaB, mdm2, skp1, and IL-2, cellular genes involved in mitogenesis, tumorigenesis, and inhibition of apoptosis in NFkappaB and p53 signaling pathways. These results define for the first time the specific cellular pathways involved in AIDS-related tumorigenesis and suggest specific novel targets for the treatment. Furthermore, we found that MAP30 downregulates the expression of egr-1, ATF-2, hsp27, hsp90, IkappaB, mdm2, and Skp1, while it upregulates the pro-apoptotic-related genes Bax, CRADD, and
caspase-3
. Thus, MAP30 modulates the expression of both viral and cellular genes involved in KS pathogenesis. These results provide valuable insight into the molecular mechanisms of MAP30 anti-KS action and suggest its utility as a therapeutic agent against AIDS-related tumors.
...
PMID:Anti-HIV agent MAP30 modulates the expression profile of viral and cellular genes for proliferation and apoptosis in AIDS-related lymphoma cells infected with Kaposi's sarcoma-associated virus. 1157 62
We recently reported that butyrate, an inhibitor of histone deacetylases, is capable of inducing Fas-independent apoptosis in the acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line CCRF-CEM. Here we demonstrate that butyrate enhances Fas-induced apoptosis in this cell line. The application of different histone deacetylase inhibitors revealed that tetra-acetylated histone H4 is associated with the amplifying effect of butyrate on Fas-induced cell death. FasL, Fas, FADD, RIP, caspase-8,
caspase-3
, Bid,
FLIP
(S+L), FLASH and FAP-1, proteins known to act within the Fas-apoptosis cascade, showed no changes in their expression levels in cells treated with butyrate compared with untreated cells. Analyses of Fas-oligomerization and Western blotting as well as enzyme activity assays of caspase-2,
caspase-3
and caspase-8 suggest that butyrate enhances Fas-induced apoptosis downstream of Fas but upstream of caspase-8 activation. In immunoprecipitation experiments a 37 kD butyrate-regulated protein was detected which specifically interacts with caspase-8.
...
PMID:Inhibition of histone deacetylase activity enhances Fas receptor-mediated apoptosis in leukemic lymphoblasts. 1159 99
Glucose uptake and metabolism inhibit hypoxia-induced apoptosis in a variety of cell types, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. In the present study, we explore hypoxia-mediated cell death pathways in Jurkat cells in the presence and absence of extracellular glucose. In the absence of extracellular glucose, hypoxia caused cytochrome c release,
caspase 3
and poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase cleavage, and DNA fragmentation; this apoptotic response was blocked by the caspase 9 inhibitor z-LEHD-FMK. The presence of extracellular glucose during hypoxia prevented cytochrome c release and activation of caspase 9 but did not prevent apoptosis in Jurkat cells. In these conditions, overexpression of the caspase 8 inhibitor v-
FLIP
prevented hypoxia-mediated cell death. Thus hypoxia can stimulate two apoptotic pathways in Jurkat cells, one dependent on cytochrome c release from mitochondria that is prevented by glucose uptake and metabolism, and the other independent of cytochrome c release and resulting from activation of the death receptor pathway, which is accelerated by glucose uptake and metabolism.
...
PMID:Hypoxia induces apoptosis via two independent pathways in Jurkat cells: differential regulation by glucose. 1160 Apr 23
Apo2L/TRAIL is a member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family of cytokines that induces death of cancer cells but not normal cells. Its potent apoptotic activity is mediated through its cell surface death domain-containing receptors, DR4 and DR5. Apo2L/TRAIL interacts also with 3 "decoy" receptors that do not induce apoptosis, DcR1, DcR2, which lack functional death domains, and osteoprotegerin (OPG). The aim of our study was to investigate the cytotoxic activity of Apo2L/TRAIL on established osteogenic sarcoma cell lines (BTK-143, HOS, MG-63, SJSA-1, G-292 and SAOS2) and in primary cultures of normal human bone (NHB) cells. When used alone, Apo2L/TRAIL at 100 ng/ml for 24 hr induced greater than 80% cell death in only 1 (BTK-143) of the 6 osteogenic sarcoma cell lines. In contrast, Apo2L/TRAIL-resistant cells were susceptible to Apo2L/TRAIL-mediated apoptosis in the presence of the anticancer drugs, Doxorubicin (DOX), Cisplatin (CDDP) and Etoposide (ETP) but not Methotrexate (MTX) or Cyclophosphamide (CPM). Importantly, neither Apo2L/TRAIL alone nor in combination with any of these drugs affected primary normal human bone cells under equivalent conditions. Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis, and its augmentation by chemotherapy in the resistant cell lines was mediated through caspase-8 and
caspase-3
activation. Furthermore, Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis and its augmentation by chemotherapy was effectively inhibited by caspase-8 zIETD-fmk and
caspase-3
zDEVD-fmk protease inhibitors and by the pan-caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk. The pattern of basal Apo2L/TRAIL receptor mRNA expression, or expression of the intracellular caspase inhibitor FLICE-inhibitory protein,
FLIP
, could not be readily correlated with resistance or sensitivity to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis. However, the augmentation of Apo2L/TRAIL effects by chemotherapy was associated with drug-induced up-regulation of death receptors DR4 and DR5 mRNA and protein. No obvious correlation was seen between the expression of OPG mRNA or protein and susceptibility of cells to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Stable over-expression of a dominant negative form of the Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) in the Apo2L/TRAIL-sensitive BTK-143 cells completely inhibited Apo2L/TRAIL-induced cell death. Our results indicate that chemotherapy and Apo2L/TRAIL act synergistically to kill cancer cells but not normal bone-derived osteoblast-like cells, which has implications for future therapy of osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:Chemotherapeutic agents sensitize osteogenic sarcoma cells, but not normal human bone cells, to Apo2L/TRAIL-induced apoptosis. 1199 38
All human melanoma cell lines (assessed by annexin V and TUNEL assays) were resistant to apoptosis induction by TRAIL/Apo2L protein. TRAIL/Apo2L activated caspase-8 and
caspase-3
, but subsequent apoptotic events such as poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage and DNA fragmentation were not observed. To probe the molecular mechanisms of cellular resistance to apoptosis, melanoma cell lines were analyzed for expression of apoptosis regulators (apoptotic protease-associated factor-1,
FLIP
, caspase-8, caspase-9,
caspase-3
, cellular inhibitor of apoptosis, Bcl-2, or Bax); no correlation was observed. TRAIL/Apo2L was induced in melanoma cell lines by IFN-beta and had been correlated with apoptosis induction. Because IFN-beta induced other gene products that have been associated with apoptosis, it was postulated that one or more IFN-stimulated genes might sensitize cells to TRAIL/Apo2L. Melanoma cell lines were treated with IFN-beta for 16-24 h before treatment with TRAIL/Apo2L. Regardless of their sensitivity to either cytokine alone, >30% of cells underwent apoptosis in response to the combined treatment. Induction of apoptosis by IFN-beta and TRAIL/Apo2L in combination correlated with synergistic activation of caspase-9, a decrease in mitochondrial potential, and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Cleavage of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis following IFN-beta and TRAIL/Apo2L treatment was observed in sensitive WM9, A375, or WM3211 cells but not in resistant WM35 or WM164 cells. Thus, in vitro IFN-beta and TRAIL/Apo2L combination treatment had more potent apoptotic and anti-growth effects when compared with either cytokine alone in melanoma cells lines.
...
PMID:IFN-beta pretreatment sensitizes human melanoma cells to TRAIL/Apo2 ligand-induced apoptosis. 1209 88
Myoblasts respond to growth factor deprivation either by differentiating into multinucleated myotubes or by undergoing apoptosis; hence, the acquisition of apoptosis resistance by myogenic precursors is essential for their development. Here we demonstrate that the expression of the small heat shock protein alpha B-crystallin is selectively induced in C2C12 myoblasts that are resistant to differentiation-induced apoptosis, and we show that this induction occurs at an early stage in their differentiation in vitro. In contrast, the expression of several known anti-apoptotic proteins (
FLIP
, XIAP, Bcl-x(L)) was not altered during myogenesis. We also demonstrate that ectopic expression of alpha B-crystallin, but not the closely related small heat shock protein Hsp27, renders C2C12 myoblasts resistant to differentiation-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, we show that the myopathy-causing R120G alpha B-crystallin mutant is partly impaired in its cytoprotective function, whereas a pseudophosphorylation alpha B-crystallin mutant that mimics stress-induced phosphorylation is completely devoid of anti-apoptotic activity. Finally, we demonstrate that alpha B-crystallin negatively regulates apoptosis during myogenesis by inhibiting the proteolytic activation of
caspase-3
, whereas the R120G and pseudophosphorylation mutants are defective in this function. Taken together, our findings indicate that alpha B-crystallin is a novel negative regulator of myogenic apoptosis that directly links the differentiation program to apoptosis resistance.
...
PMID:The small heat shock protein alpha B-crystallin negatively regulates apoptosis during myogenic differentiation by inhibiting caspase-3 activation. 1214 Feb 79
Death receptors, such as Fas and tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand receptors, recruit Fas-associated death domain and pro-caspase-8 homodimers, which are then autoproteolytically activated. Active caspase-8 is released into the cytoplasm, where it cleaves various proteins including pro-
caspase-3
, resulting in apoptosis. The cellular Fas-associated death domain-like interleukin-1-beta-converting enzyme-inhibitory protein long form (
FLIP
(L)), a structural homologue of caspase-8 lacking caspase activity because of several mutations in the active site, is a potent inhibitor of death receptor-induced apoptosis.
FLIP
(L) is proposed to block caspase-8 activity by forming a proteolytically inactive heterodimer with caspase-8. In contrast, we propose that
FLIP
(L)-bound caspase-8 is an active protease. Upon heterocomplex formation, a limited caspase-8 autoprocessing occurs resulting in the generation of the p43/41 and the p12 subunits. This partially processed form but also the non-cleaved
FLIP
(L)-caspase-8 heterocomplex are proteolytically active because they both bind synthetic substrates efficiently. Moreover,
FLIP
(L) expression favors receptor-interacting kinase (RIP) processing within the Fas-signaling complex. We propose that
FLIP
(L) inhibits caspase-8 release-dependent pro-apoptotic signals, whereas the single, membrane-restricted active site of the
FLIP
(L)-caspase-8 heterocomplex is proteolytically active and acts on local substrates such as RIP.
...
PMID:The long form of FLIP is an activator of caspase-8 at the Fas death-inducing signaling complex. 1221 47
Small GTP-binding Rho GTPases regulate important signaling pathways in endothelial cells, but little is known about their role in endothelial cell apoptosis. Clostridial cytotoxins specifically inactivate GTPases by glucosylation [Clostridium difficile toxin B-10463 (TcdB-10463), C. difficile toxin B-1470 (TcdB-1470)] or ADP ribosylation (C. botulinum C3 toxin). Exposure of human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) to TcdB-10463, which inhibits RhoA/Rac1/Cdc42, or to C3 toxin, which inhibits RhoA, -B, -C, resulted in apoptosis, whereas inactivation of Rac1/Cdc42 with TcdB-1470 was without effect, suggesting that Rho inhibition was responsible for endothelial apoptosis. Disruption of endothelial microfilaments as well as inhibition of p160ROCK did not induce endothelial apoptosis. Exposure to TcdB-10463 resulted in activation of caspase-9 and -3 but not caspase-8 in HUVEC. Moreover, Rho inhibition reduced expression of antiapoptotic Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 and increased proapoptotic Bid but had no effect on Bax or
FLIP
protein levels.
Caspase-3
activity and apoptosis induced by TcdB-10463 were abolished by cAMP elevation. In summary, inhibition of Rho in endothelial cells activates caspase-9- and -3-dependent apoptosis, which can be antagonized by cAMP elevation.
...
PMID:Rho protein inactivation induced apoptosis of cultured human endothelial cells. 1222 60
Interferon gamma (IFNgamma) acts on human erythroid colony-forming cells (ECFCs) to up-regulate Fas, without a demonstrable change of Fas ligand (FasL) or Fas-associated DD-containing protein (FADD) expression and activates caspase-8 plus
caspase-3
, which produce apoptosis. Our previous data showed that stem cell factor (SCF) reduced the inhibitory effect of IFNgamma on human ECFCs when both factors were present in the cultures. However, the mechanism by which SCF prevents IFNgamma-induced apoptosis in ECFCs is unclear. In this study we used highly purified human ECFCs to investigate the mechanism of the effect of SCF on IFNgamma-induced apoptosis. Because the binding of FasL to Fas is the first step of the apoptosis cascade and IFNgamma strongly up-regulates Fas expression, we added FasL (50 ng/mL) to the cultures with IFNgamma to accentuate the IFNgamma-induced activation of caspase-8 and
caspase-3
plus subsequent apoptosis. SCF (100 ng/mL) clearly inhibited the activation of caspase-8 and
caspase-3
induced by IFNgamma and/or FasL, and it also reduced apoptosis as measured by the terminal dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) assay. SCF did not decrease the surface expression of Fas on the ECFCs. FADD-like interleukin 1 beta (IL-1beta)-converting enzyme (FLICE)-inhibitory protein (
FLIP
) has been reported to interact with FADD and/or caspase-8 at the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) level following Fas stimulation and acts as a dominant-negative caspase-8. SCF increased
FLIP
mRNA and protein expression, concomitant with reduced apoptosis, whereas IFNgamma and/or FasL did not change
FLIP
expression. Reduction of
FLIP
expression with antisense oligonucleotides decreased the capacity of SCF to inhibit IFNgamma-induced apoptosis, demonstrating a definite role for
FLIP
in the SCF-induced protection of ECFCs from IFNgamma-initiated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Stem cell factor increases the expression of FLIP that inhibits IFNgamma -induced apoptosis in human erythroid progenitor cells. 1239 27
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