Literature DB >> 11677238

Lack of correlation between caspase activation and caspase activity assays in paclitaxel-treated MCF-7 breast cancer cells.

Timothy J Kottke1, April L Blajeski, X Wei Meng, Phyllis A Svingen, Sandrine Ruchaud, Peter W Mesner, Scott A Boerner, Kumiko Samejima, Nicholas V Henriquez, Tamie J Chilcote, Janet Lord, Michael Salmon, William C Earnshaw, Scott H Kaufmann.   

Abstract

MCF-7 human breast cancer cells are widely utilized to study apoptotic processes. Recent studies demonstrated that these cells lack procaspase-3. In the present study, caspase activation and activity were examined in this cell line after treatment with the microtubule poison paclitaxel. When cells were harvested 72 h after the start of a 24-h treatment with 100 nm paclitaxel, 37 +/- 5% of the cells were nonadherent and displayed apoptotic morphological changes. Although mitochondrial cytochrome c release and caspase-9 cleavage were detectable by immunoblotting, assays of cytosol and nuclei prepared from the apoptotic cells failed to demonstrate the presence of activity that cleaved the synthetic caspase substrates LEHD-7-amino-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin (LEHD-AFC), DEVD-AFC, and VEID-AFC. Likewise, the paclitaxel-treated MCF-7 cells failed to cleave a variety of caspase substrates, including lamin A, beta-catenin, gelsolin, protein kinase Cdelta, topoisomerase I, and procaspases-6, -8, and -10. Transfection of MCF-7 cells with wild type procaspase-3 partially restored cleavage of these polypeptides but did not result in detectable activities that could cleave the synthetic caspase substrates. Immunoblotting revealed that caspase-9, and -3, which were proteolytically cleaved in paclitaxel-treated MCF-7/caspase-3 cells, were sequestered in a salt-resistant sedimentable fraction rather than released to the cytosol. Immunofluorescence indicated large cytoplasmic aggregates containing cleaved caspase-3 in these apoptotic cells. These observations suggest that sequestration of caspases can occur in some model systems, causing tetrapeptide-based activity assays to underestimate the amount of caspase activation that has occurred in situ.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11677238     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M108419200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  14 in total

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