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)

Cycloheximide (CHX) can contribute to apoptotic processes, either in conjunction with another agent (e.g. tumor necrosis factor-alpha) or on its own. However, the basis of this CHX-induced apoptosis has not been clearly established. In this study, the molecular mechanisms of CHX-induced cell death were examined in two different human T-cell lines. In T-cells undergoing CHX-induced apoptosis (Jurkat), but not in T-cells resistant to the effects of CHX (CEM C7), caspase-8 and caspase-3 were activated. However, the Fas ligand was not expressed in Jurkat cells either before or after treatment with CHX, suggesting that the activation of these caspases does not involve the Fas receptor. To determine whether CHX-induced apoptosis was mediated by a Fas-associated death domain (FADD)-dependent mechanism, a FADD-DN protein was expressed in cells prior to CHX treatment. Its expression effectively inhibited CHX-induced cell death, suggesting that CHX-mediated apoptosis primarily involves a FADD-dependent mechanism. Since CHX treatment did not result in the induction of Fas or FasL, and neutralizing anti-Fas and anti-tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 antibodies did not block CHX-mediated apoptosis, these results may also indicate that FADD functions in a receptor-independent manner. Surprisingly, death effector filaments containing FADD and caspase-8 were observed during CHX treatment of Jurkat, Jurkat-FADD-DN, and CEM C7 cells, suggesting that their formation may be necessary, but not sufficient, for cell death.
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PMID:Cycloheximide-induced T-cell death is mediated by a Fas-associated death domain-dependent mechanism. 1006 86

Physiological levels of laminar shear stress completely abrogate apoptosis of human endothelial cells in response to a variety of stimuli and might therefore importantly contribute to endothelial integrity. We show here that the apoptosis-suppressive effects of shear stress are mediated by upregulation of Cu/Zn SOD and NO synthase. Shear stress-mediated inhibition of endothelial cell apoptosis in response to exogenous oxygen radicals, oxidized LDL, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha was associated with complete inhibition of caspase-3-like activity, the central effector arm executing the apoptotic cell death program in endothelial cells. Shear stress-dependent upregulation of Cu/Zn SOD and NO synthase blocks activation of the caspase cascade in response to apoptosis-inducing stimuli. These findings establish the upregulation of Cu/Zn SOD and NO synthase by shear stress as a central protective cellular mechanism to preserve the integrity of the endothelium after proapoptotic stimulation.
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PMID:Upregulation of superoxide dismutase and nitric oxide synthase mediates the apoptosis-suppressive effects of shear stress on endothelial cells. 1007 70

Earlier reports have shown that herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) mutants induce programmed cell death and that wild-type HSV blocks the execution of the cell death program triggered by viral gene products, by the effectors of the immune system such as the Fas and tumor necrosis factor pathways, or by nonspecific stress agents such as either osmotic shock induced by sorbitol or thermal shock. A report from this laboratory showed that caspase inhibitors do not block DNA fragmentation induced by infection with the HSV-1 d120 mutant. To identify the events in programmed cell death induced and blocked by HSV-1, we examined cells infected with wild-type virus or the d120 mutant or cells infected and exposed to sorbitol. We report that: (i) the HSV-1 d120 mutant induced apoptosis by a caspase-3-independent pathway inasmuch as caspase 3 was not activated and DNA fragmentation was not blocked by caspase inhibitors even though the virus caused cytochrome c release and depolarization of the inner mitochondrial membrane. (ii) Cells infected with wild-type HSV-1 exhibited none of the manifestations associated with programmed cell death assayed in these studies. (iii) Uninfected cells exposed to osmotic shock succumbed to caspase-dependent apoptosis inasmuch as cytochrome c was released, the inner mitochondrial potential was lost, caspase-3 was activated, and chromosomal DNA was fragmented. (iv) Although caspase-3 was activated in cells infected with wild-type HSV-1 and exposed to sorbitol, cytochrome c outflow, depolarization of the inner mitochondrial membrane, and DNA fragmentation were blocked. We conclude that although d120 induces apoptosis by a caspase-3-independent pathway, the wild-type virus blocks apoptosis induced by this pathway and also blocks the caspase-dependent pathway induced by osmotic shock. The block in the caspase-dependent pathway may occur downstream of caspase-3 activation.
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PMID:Herpes simplex virus 1 blocks caspase-3-independent and caspase-dependent pathways to cell death. 1007 75

Beta-lapachone, the product of a tree from South America, is known to exhibit various pharmacologic properties, the mechanisms of which are poorly understood. In the present report, we examined the effect of beta-lapachone on the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced activation of the nuclear transcription factors NF-kappaB and activator protein-1 (AP-1) in human myeloid U937 cells. TNF-induced NF-kappaB activation, p65 translocation, IkappaBalpha degradation, and NF-kappaB-dependent reporter gene expression were inhibited in cells pretreated with beta-lapachone. Direct treatment of the p50-p65 heterodimer of NF-kappaB with beta-lapachone had no effect on its ability to bind to the DNA. Besides myeloid cells, beta-lapachone was also inhibitory in T-cells and epithelial cells. Beta-lapachone also suppressed the activation of NF-kappaB by lipopolysaccharide, okadaic acid, and ceramide but had no significant effect on activation by H2O2 or phorbol myristate acetate, indicating that its action is selective. Beta-lapachone also abolished TNF-induced activation of AP-1, c-Jun N-terminal kinase, and mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MAPKK or MEK). TNF-induced cytotoxicity and activation of caspase-3 were also abolished by beta-lapachone. Because reducing agents (dithiothreitol and N-acetylcysteine) reversed the effect of beta-lapachone, it suggests the role of a critical sulfhydryl group. Overall, our results identify NF-kappaB, AP-1, and apoptosis as novel targets for beta-lapachone, and this may explain some of its pharmacologic effects.
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PMID:Suppression of tumor necrosis factor-activated nuclear transcription factor-kappaB, activator protein-1, c-Jun N-terminal kinase, and apoptosis by beta-lapachone. 1007 82

We investigated the expression of Fas antigen (CD95) in the pure erythroid cell line AS-E2 in the presence and absence of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). TNF-alpha induced apoptosis in AS-E2 cells, whereas IFN-gamma did not. In culture containing no IFN-gamma or TNF-alpha, AS-E2 cells expressed little Fas antigen. However, IFN-gamma and IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha both induced expression of Fas antigen and its mRNA within 24 hours after the stimulation. When anti-Fas monoclonal antibody (IgM) was added to AS-E2 cells after the induction of Fas expression, AS-E2 cells underwent apoptosis as shown by the induction of DNA fragmentation. This apoptotic change was inhibited by an inhibitor of caspase-3-like proteases (Ac-DEVD-CHO) and an inhibitor of CED-3/ICE family proteases (Z-Asp-CH2-DCB) but not by an inhibitor of caspase-1-like proteases (Ac-YVAD-CHO), suggesting a role for caspase-3-like proteases in Fas-receptor signaling. Although AS-E2 cells expressed Fas ligand mRNA, treatment with ZB4, an antibody that inhibits Fas-mediated cell death, failed to suppress IFN-gamma- or TNF-alpha-mediated cytotoxicity. These findings suggest that the late erythroid progenitor cells are negatively regulated by IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha, both of which are capable of inducing functional Fas expression.
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PMID:Fas antigen (CD95) in pure erythroid cell line AS-E2 is induced by interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha and potentiates apoptotic death. 1008 5

Apoptosis is a cell death process morphologically distinct from necrosis. Cells undergoing apoptosis shrink, the plasma membrane forms blebs, and the nucleus condenses. The nuclear DNA is degraded into oligonucleosomal fragments. Apoptosis plays regulatory and protective roles by eliminating unnecessary and dangerous cells, respectively. Many factors involved in apoptosis have been identified, their roles and interactions being understood at the molecular level. The bcl-2 family regulates apoptosis, and its members are classified into two groups: anti-apoptotic that inhibits apoptosis and pro-apoptotic that induces or accelerates it. The members form dimers to inactivate each other. Caspases cleave other members of the caspase family to activate their proteolytic activity in a cascade-like fashion, and the final target proteins prosecute apoptosis. In the case of Fas or tumor necrosis factor receptors, apoptotic signals are transmitted to the caspases via protein-protein interactions, whereas in other cases they originate from mitochondria. In the early process of apoptosis, cytochrome c, which usually is involved in the respiratory chain, is released from mitochondria into the cytosol, then bind to Apaf-1, a homologue of CED-4 of nematoda, to process pro-caspase-9. The resulting activated caspase-9 cleaves pro-caspase-3 into an activated form, which is responsible for the later process of apoptosis.
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PMID:[Molecular mechanism of apoptosis]. 1019 33

Experimental models of sepsis using endotoxin challenges, including studies with sensitized animals with D-galactosamine, have largely contributed to the basic rationale for innovative clinical trials in human septic shock, which have, to date, failed. The ability of these models to reproduce human disease has been highly discussed. We report here that the widely used D-galactosamine/LPS model does not account for septic shock. Treatment with YVAD-CMK, a potent tetrapeptide inhibitor of caspases of the interleukin (IL)-1beta converting enzyme (ICE) family, protects from LPS-induced liver apoptosis and mortality in D-galactosamine-sensitized mice when administered either before or up to 2 h after the lethal challenge. This curative effect is related to complete inhibition of caspase-3 activity in the liver. However, YVAD-CMK does not affect LPS-induced release of IL-1beta and does not protect from a lethal dose of LPS in unsensitized mice. These experiments demonstrate the difference between these two widely recognized experimental models of sepsis. LPS toxicity in D-galactosamine-treated mice, leading to blocked gene transcription, results from tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-induced caspase-3-dependent liver injury, not from the systemic inflammatory response. These results provide evidence that inhibitors of the ICE caspase family can prevent or even overcome the ongoing hepatic injury induced by TNF-alpha during sepsis, ischemia-reperfusion, or severe hepatitis.
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PMID:LPS challenge in D-galactosamine-sensitized mice accounts for caspase-dependent fulminant hepatitis, not for septic shock. 1019 82

LNCaP prostate cancer cells are highly resistant to induction of programmed cell death by y-irradiation and somewhat sensitive to the death-inducing effects of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. Simultaneous exposure of LNCaP cells to TNF-alpha and 8 Gy of irradiation was synergistic and resulted in a 3-fold increase of apoptotic cells within 72 h compared to TNF-alpha alone. It appeared that TNF-alpha sensitized the cells to irradiation because, when cells were irradiated 24 h after exposure to TNF-alpha, increased cell death was observed. In contrast, irradiation delivered 24 h prior to TNF-alpha exposure did not result in more cell death than after TNF-alpha alone. TNF-alpha induced expression of its own mRNA, but TNF-alpha mRNA induction was neither induced nor enhanced by irradiation. Activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB can be induced by TNF-alpha and has a modulating antiapoptotic effect. But enhancement of TNF-alpha-induced cell death by irradiation did not result from altered activation of nuclear factor kappaB. TNF-alpha treatment of LNCaP cells resulted in partial activation of caspase-8 and -6 but not caspase-3. There was only minimal poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage seen in LNCaP cells after exposure to both TNF-alpha and irradiation at 72 h, a time when 60% of the cells were apoptotic. Experiments with peptide inhibitors of cysteine and serine proteases suggested that caspases were the predominant mediators of apoptosis induced by TNF-alpha alone but that serine proteases contributed significantly to cell death induced by TNF-alpha plus irradiation. TNF-alpha increased production of ceramide in LNCaP cells 48 h after exposure. Although irradiation alone had no effect on ceramide production in LNCaP cells, TNF-alpha plus irradiation induced significantly more ceramide than TNF-alpha alone. Ceramide production did not occur immediately after exposure to TNF-alpha, but rather was delayed such that ceramide levels were increased only 24 h after exposure to apoptotic stimuli. Moreover, non-toxic levels of exogenous C2-ceramide sensitized LNCaP cells to irradiation similarly to TNF-alpha, suggesting that one mechanism by which LNCaP cells were sensitized to irradiation was by increased intracellular ceramide. Hence, ceramide generation is a critical component in radiation-induced apoptosis in human prostate cancer cells. Inhibition of ceramide generation may provide a selective advantage in the development of radioresistance in prostate cancer.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha sensitizes prostate cancer cells to gamma-irradiation-induced apoptosis. 1019 36

In this study, a mechanism is reported which determines the lifetime of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN). In human PMN freshly isolated from the circulation, expression of bcl-Xl, bax-alpha, and bak, members of the bcl-2 family of apoptosis-associated genes, was found using the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction technique. In contrast, no expression of bcl-2 was seen in PMN, whereas the myeloid cell line HL-60 was positive for bcl-2 mRNA. Two gene products, Bcl-Xl and Bax-alpha, which are known to function as the regulatory machinery of programmed cell death (apoptosis), were detected at the protein level in PMN. Moreover, differential expression of these proteins was found upon induction or prevention of apoptosis by cytokines: Whereas induction of apoptosis by tumor necrosis factor-alpha was associated with a reduction of expression of the anti-apoptotic Bcl-Xl protein, prevention of apoptosis by granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor led to a downregulation of expression of the death-promoting Bax-alpha protein. This shift of balance of anti- and pro-apoptotic proteins was found to control caspase-3 activity which, in turn, downregulated Bcl-Xl expression in PMN undergoing apoptosis. Thus, cytokines can affect the ratio of Bax-alpha/Bcl-Xl expression in human PMN and modulate the subsequent activity of caspase-3, which functions as executer of the programmed cell death and may promote apoptosis by a positive feed-forward mechanism that downregulates Bcl-Xl.
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PMID:Bcl-Xl- and Bax-alpha-mediated regulation of apoptosis of human neutrophils via caspase-3. 1021 8

Fas-mediated apoptosis is observed in synoviocytes of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). This process may be involved in the pathophysiology of RA. We have recently found that Fas-mediated apoptosis of RA synoviocytes is associated with activation of two signaling pathways, the c-Jun amino-terminal kinase (JNK)/activator protein-1 (AP-1) pathway, and the FADD (Fas-associated death domain protein)/Caspase-8/Caspase-3/PARP (poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase) pathway. The latter appears to be one of the major signaling pathways required for Fas-mediated apoptosis in RA synoviocytes. Interestingly, Fas-mediated apoptosis in synoviocytes may be induced at least in part by tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Paradoxically, tumor necrosis factor-alpha also causes proliferation of synoviocytes. Employing these molecular processes in the treatment of RA, we have recently shown that ex vivo gene transfer of human Fas ligand (hFasL) induced apoptosis of synoviocytes and infiltrated mononuclear cells of RA synovial tissue through cell-to-cell interaction via the Fas/FasL system. We believe that further understanding of the complex regulatory mechanisms of apoptosis in RA synoviocytes would uncover further aspects of the pathophysiologic mechanisms of RA and contribute to the development of new and effective therapies for RA.
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PMID:Apomodulation as a novel therapeutic concept for the regulation of apoptosis in rheumatoid synoviocytes. 1032 78


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