Literature DB >> 11464214

An apoptosis signaling pathway induced by the death domain of FADD selectively kills normal but not cancerous prostate epithelial cells.

M J Morgan1, J Thorburn, L Thomas, T Maxwell, A R Brothman, A Thorburn.   

Abstract

The adaptor protein FADD directly, or indirectly via another adaptor called TRADD, recruits caspase 8 to death receptors of the tumor necrosis factor receptor family. Consequentially, a dominant-negative mutant (FADD-DN, which consists only of the FADD death domain) that binds to receptors but cannot recruit caspase 8 has been widely used to inhibit apoptosis by various stimuli that work via death receptors. Here, we show that FADD-DN also has another cell type- and cancer-dependent activity because it induces apoptosis of normal human prostate epithelial cells but not normal prostate stromal cells or prostate cancer cells. This activity is independent of FADD-DN's ability to bind to three known interacting proteins, Fas, TRADD or RIP suggesting that it is distinct from FADD's functions at activated death receptors. FADD-DN induces caspase activation in normal epithelial cells as demonstrated using a Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer assay that measures caspase activity in individual living cells. However, caspase-independent pathways are also implicated in FADD-DN-induced apoptosis because caspase inhibitors were inefficient at preventing prostate cell death. Therefore, the death domain of FADD has a previously unrecognized role in cell survival that is epithelial-specific and defective in cancer cells. This FADD-dependent signaling pathway may be important in prostate carcinogenesis.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11464214     DOI: 10.1038/sj.cdd.4400866

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Death Differ        ISSN: 1350-9047            Impact factor:   15.828


  10 in total

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Authors:  Jacqueline Thorburn; Laura M Bender; Michael J Morgan; Andrew Thorburn
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2003-01       Impact factor: 4.138

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