| Literature DB >> 19402918 |
Cinzia Di Pietro1, Marco Ragusa, Davide Barbagallo, Laura R Duro, Maria R Guglielmino, Alessandra Majorana, Rosario Angelica, Marina Scalia, Luisa Statello, Loredana Salito, Luisa Tomasello, Salvo Pernagallo, Salvo Valenti, Vito D'Agostino, Patrizio Triberio, Igor Tandurella, Giuseppe A Palumbo, Piera La Cava, Viviana Cafiso, Taschia Bertuccio, Maria Santagati, Giovanni Li Destri, Salvatore Lanzafame, Francesco Di Raimondo, Stefania Stefani, Bud Mishra, Michele Purrello.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Apoptosis is a critical biological phenomenon, executed under the guidance of the Apoptotic Machinery (AM), which allows the physiologic elimination of terminally differentiated, senescent or diseased cells. Because of its relevance to BioMedicine, we have sought to obtain a detailed characterization of AM Omics in Homo sapiens, namely its Genomics and Evolution, Transcriptomics, Proteomics, Interactomics, Oncogenomics, and Pharmacogenomics.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19402918 PMCID: PMC2683874 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8794-2-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Pro AM core genes
| APAF1 | p53 Pathway, Apoptosome | PRO | |
| BAD | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO | |
| BAK1 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO |
| BAX | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway, p53 Pathway | PRO |
| BCL2L1 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO* |
| BID | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO |
| CARD12 | NALP | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CARD4 | NALP | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CARD8 | NALP | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP10 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP3 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP6 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP7 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP8 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade | PRO |
| CASP9 | CASPASE | Caspase Cascade, Apoptosome | PRO |
| CFLAR | CASPASE | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO* |
| CHUK | SER/THR KINASE | AKT Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | PRO |
| CYCS | Caspase Cascade, Apoptosome | PRO | |
| DAP | IFN-Gamma-Induced Cell Death | PRO | |
| DAP3 | IFN-Gamma-Induced Cell Death, FAS Signaling Pathway, SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | PRO | |
| DAPK1 | IFN-Gamma-Induced Cell Death | PRO | |
| DAXX | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO | |
| DFFA | Apoptotic DNA Fragmentation and Tissue Homeostasis | PRO | |
| DFFB | Apoptotic DNA Fragmentation and Tissue Homeostasis | PRO | |
| FADD | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO | |
| FAS | TNF RECEPTOR | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO* |
| FASLG | TNF | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO |
| HRK | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO | |
| IL1A | INTERLEUKIN 1 CYTOKINE | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | PRO* |
| IL1R1 | INTERLEUKIN 1 RECEPTOR | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | PRO* |
| MCL1 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | PRO* |
| NALP1 | NALP | FAS Signaling Pathway | PRO |
| NFKBIA | AKT Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors, NF-kB Signaling Pathway | PRO | |
| RIPK1 | SER/THR KINASE | NF-kB Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | PRO |
| TNF | TNF | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | PRO* |
| TNFRSF10A | TNF RECEPTOR | Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors, Natural Killer Cell Mediated Cytotoxicity | PRO |
| TNFRSF10B | TNF RECEPTOR | p53 Pathway, Natural Killer Cell Mediated Cytotoxicity | PRO |
| TNFRSF1A | TNF RECEPTOR | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | PRO |
| TNFSF10 | TNF | Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | PRO |
| TP53 | TP53-RELATED | Apoptotic Signaling in Response to DNA Damage, ATM Signaling Pathway, | PRO |
| TRADD | Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | PRO | |
| TRAF2 | TRAF | Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | PRO* |
The symbol "*" means involvement also in anti-apoptotic functions.
Anti AM core genes
| AKT1 | SER/THR KINASE | FAS Sgnaling Pathway | ANTI |
| BAG1 | BCL2-ASSOCIATED ATHANOGENE | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | ANTI |
| BAG3 | BCL2-ASSOCIATED ATHANOGENE | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | ANTI |
| BAG4 | BCL2-ASSOCIATED ATHANOGENE | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | ANTI |
| BCL2 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway, p53 Pathway | ANTI |
| BCL2L1 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | ANTI* |
| BIRC2 | BIRC | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway, Caspase Cascade | ANTI |
| BIRC3 | BIRC | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway, Caspase Cascade, SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | ANTI |
| BIRC4 | BIRC | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway, Caspase Cascade, B Cell Survival Pathway | ANTI |
| BIRC5 | BIRC | B Cell Survival Pathway | ANTI |
| CFLAR | CASPASE | FAS Signaling Pathway | ANTI* |
| FAS | TNF RECEPTOR | FAS Signaling Pathway | ANTI* |
| IL1A | INTERLEUKIN 1 CYTOKINE | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI* |
| IL1R1 | INTERLEUKIN 1 RECEPTOR | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI* |
| MAP3K14 | SER/THR KINASE | NF-kB Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | ANTI |
| MCL1 | BCL-2 RELATED | Apoptotic Mitochondrial Pathway | ANTI* |
| MYD88 | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI | |
| NFKB1 | AKT Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors, NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI | |
| NFKB2 | AKT Signaling Pathway, Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors, NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI | |
| RELA | NF-kB Signaling Pathway | ANTI | |
| TNF | TNF | SODD/TNFR1 Signaling Pathway | ANTI* |
| TNFRSF10C | TNF RECEPTOR | Natural Killer Cell Mediated Cytotoxicity | ANTI |
| TNFRSF10D | TNF RECEPTOR | Natural Killer Cell Mediated Cytotoxicity | ANTI |
| TRAF2 | TRAF | Induction of Apoptosis through DR3 and DR4/5 Death Receptors | ANTI* |
The symbol "*" means involvement also in pro-apoptotic functions.
Figure 1AM evolution. Panel A. Matrix of phylogenetic distribution of AM genes in all taxa. Each row represents the color coded ratio between ortholog number for individual AM genes and species analyzed in a given taxon, according to the colour bar shown above the matrix; the columns represent the taxa. Panel B. Evolutionary accretion of AM: number of AM genes appeared in the genomes during evolution. Panel C. Evolutionary rate of AM proteins: the X-axis represents the distribution classes of evolutionary rates, indicated as amino acid substitution for 100 amino acids per year as shown in the caption to the right. The Y-axis represents the number of proteins in each class of evolutionary rate.
Figure 2Apoptotic structural modules. Panel A. Most frequent motifs and domains in AM. Panel B. Map of interactions among the most frequent apoptotic structural modules and their propensity to perform a negative or positive control of cell death.
Figure 3Interactomics of AM. Panel A. AM Network: red circles represent the proteins; green triangles represent experimentally verified microRNAs; blue triangles represent predicted microRNAs; blue lines represent the interactions (protein-protein, protein-DNA, microRNA-mRNA interactions). Panel B. Matrix of interactions of AM. Each axis represents all AM proteins and the red dots indicate the presence of an interaction of a given pair of proteins. The blue lines point out the BCL2, CASPASE and STAT family members. Panel C. Heat map of centrality values of AM proteins: the X-axis represents the AM proteins with the highest centrality, while the Y-axis represents different centrality parameters (betweenness, centroid, closeness, degree, eccentricity). The colours indicate the centrality levels, according to the colour bar shown on the right of the matrix.
Figure 4The most evolutionarily conserved interactions in AM.
Figure 5Frequency of chromosomal mutations involving AM loci. Panel A. Heat Map showing the frequencies of chromosomal mutations related to AM protein-encoding-loci in the fourteen cancer models (see Methods). Panel B. Heat Map showing the frequencies of chromosomal mutations related to MIR-encoding loci for AM in fourteen cancer models. Red indicates genome amplification, while green points to genome deletions.
Figure 6Mutations of AM genes. Panel A. Number of AM genes involved in cancer related GI. Red and green bars show the genome amplifications and deletions, respectively. Panel B. Frequency of AM genes point mutations in cancer.
AM genes mutated in specific cancers
| ATM – BIRC6 – BRAF – BRCA2 – CDKN2A – CHUK – DAPK1 – HRAS – HUWE1 – NFKB1 – NFKBIA – PTPN13 – RB1 – STAT1 – TP53 | |
| BRAF – BRCA2 – CDKN2A – RB1 – SRC – TP53 | |
| ATM – AVEN – BRAF – CASP3 – CASP9 – CDKN2A – CUL3 – HRAS – MAPK8 – RB1 – TP53 | |
| ABL1 – BRAF – CDKN2A – HRAS – RB1 – TP53 | |
| BRAF – BRCA2 – CDKN2A – RB1 – TP53 | |
| AATK – ABL1 – APAF1 – ATM – BCL2L13 – BIRC4 – BIRC6 – BIRC8 – BNIP3 – BRAF – BRCA2 – CARD6 – CASP14 – CASP4 – CASP5 – CDKN2A – CHUK – CREBBP – CUL4B – CYCS – DAPK3 – FASTK – HRAS – IRAK3 – MAP3K14 – MYBL2 – NTRK1 – P53AIP1 – PAX7 – PDCD5 – RAF1 – RB1 – RET – SGK – SGK3 – STK17B – STK3 – TGFBR2 – TNFRSF9 – TP53 | |
| BRAF – CDKN2A – TP53 | |
| AATK – BRAF – BRCA2 – CDKN2A – DAPK3 – MAP3K14 – NTRK1 – RAF1 – RB1 – RET – STK3 – TP53 | |
| BIRC6 – BRAF – CDKN2A – FAF1 – TP53 | |
| BRAF – CDKN2A – HRAS – RB1 – TP53 | |
| ABL1 – BAX – BCL2L13 – BCL2L14 – BIRC3 – BIRC6 – BNIP3 – BRAF – BRCA2 – CARD14 – CARD6 – CASP10 – CASP4 – CASP8 – CD40 – CDC2L1 – CDKN2A – CORO1C – CREBBP – CUL4A – DAXX – E2F6 – ENC1 – HIPK2 – HRAS – IL4R – MAPK7 – MYCN – PDCD4 – PDCD6IP – RB1 – RIPK1 – TNF – TNFRSF1A – TNFRSF8 – TNFRSF9 – TNFSF10 – TNFSF13 – TP53 – TP73L – TRAF2 | |
| AATK – ATM – BRAF – CDKN2A – FASTK – HRAS – JAK1 – NTRK1 – RB1 – SGK – TGFBR2 – TP53 | |
| BRAF – CDKN2A – HRAS – RET | |
Methylations of AM genes associated to cancer
| 47 | |||||||||||||
| 98 | 35 | ||||||||||||
| 10 | |||||||||||||
| 18 | 22 | 52 | |||||||||||
| 80 | |||||||||||||
| 80 | |||||||||||||
| 75 | 75 | ||||||||||||
| 66 | 16 | 80 | 49 | ||||||||||
| 5 | |||||||||||||
| 100 | 37 | ||||||||||||
| 20 | 33 | ||||||||||||
| 41 | 8 | ||||||||||||
| 5 | |||||||||||||
| 55 | 47 | 32 | 16 | 7 | 34 | 16 | 67 | 14 | 16 | 19 | 51 | 24 | |
| 25 | |||||||||||||
| 42 | |||||||||||||
| 40 | 13 | ||||||||||||
| 70 | |||||||||||||
| 60 | |||||||||||||
| 20 | 33 | 20 | 40 | 11 | |||||||||
| 72 | |||||||||||||
| 2 | |||||||||||||
| 100 | |||||||||||||
| 14 | 17 | ||||||||||||
| 18 | 38 | 70 | 43 | 32 | 71 | ||||||||
| 30 | 25 | 8 | 36 | 46 | 31 | 19 | 52 | 63 | 5 | ||||
| 17 | 14 | 25 | 19 | 21 | 8 | 5 | 42 | ||||||
| 30 | 100 | ||||||||||||
| 48 | |||||||||||||
| 70 | 26 | 23 | 25 | 31 | 65 | ||||||||
| 74 | 28 | 31 | 25 | ||||||||||
| 12 | 13 | ||||||||||||
| 50 | 61 | 20 | 22 | 29 | 14 | 29 | |||||||
Numeric values correspond to the mean of methylation degree (% of sample where methylation was detected in primary samples, according to Pubmeth).
Figure 7AM trascriptome in cancer. Panel A. Expression matrix of protein-encoding AM genes in cancer. Up regulated genes are depicted in red, down regulated genes in green. Each row represents the colour coded expression of a specific gene in the indicated cancer models; the columns represent the colour coded AM profiles of each cancer model. The dendrogram above the matrix represents the clusters of the tumours. Panel B. Percentage of dysregulated AM genes in cancer. Panel C. Matrix of identity profile of AM dysregulation in cancer, based on number of the same dysregulated genes for each couple of models normalized for their average number of altered genes.
Figure 8Transcriptome alteration of regulators of apoptosis. Panel A. Positive regulators of AM. Panel B. Negative regulators of AM.
Figure 9Trascriptome of AM MIRs in cancer. Panel A. Expression matrix of MIR-encoding genes computationally predicted as targeting AM. Panel B: Expression matrix of MIR-encoding genes experimentally validated as targeting AM. The colours indicate the expression levels of MIRs according to the bar shown above the matrixes. n = normal; t = tumoral.
Transcriptome and proteome alterations of AM targets of MIRs
| Up regulated in LUNG | Up regulated in LUNG | MIR15A, MIR16-1, MIR16-2, MIR34A down regulated in LUNG | |
| Up regulated in KIDNEY, PROSTATE | Up regulated in KIDNEY, PROSTATE | MIR22, MIR23A, MIR23B, MIR218-1, MIR218-2 MIR301 down regulated in KIDNEY; MIR22, MIR23A, MIR181A, MIR181C down regulated in PROSTATE | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR124A-1, MIR124A-2, MIR124A-3 down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR124A-1, MIR124A-2, MIR124A-3 down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Up regulated in LUNG; normal in PROSTATE | Up regulated in LUNG; normal in PROSTATE | MIR30B down regulated in LUNG and PROSTATE; MIR30D down regulated in LUNG | |
| Normal in LUNG, KIDNEY, PANCREAS | Up regulated in LUNG, KIDNEY, PANCREAS | MIR130A, MIR130B down regulated in LUNG, KIDNEY, PANCREAS; MIR23A down regulated in LUNG, KIDNEY | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR7-1, MIR7-2, MIR7-3, MIR128A, MIR128B down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Down regulated in LUNG | Up regulated in LUNG | MIR15B, MIR16, MIR145, MIR195 down regulated in LUNG | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR98, MIRLET7G down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR124A-1, MIR124A-2, MIR124A-3 down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Normal in KIDNEY | Up regulated in KIDNEY | MIR106 down regulated in KIDNEY | |
| Down regulated in LUNG; normal in PANCREAS | Up regulated in LUNG, PANCREAS | MIR92 down regulated in LUNG, PANCREAS | |
Figure 10Overlapping between AM genome alterations and transcriptome dysregulation in cancer. Percentage of AM genome/transcriptome alterations in cancer models.
MIR genes localized in rearranged genome regions and transcriptionally altered
| MIR10A | |||||
| MIR133A2*, MIR1-1* | MIR1-1* | ||||
| MIR1-2*, MIR133A1*, MIR30C-1 | MIRLET7G, MIR128B | MIRLET7F1, MIRLET7G, MIRLET7D, MIR101-2, MIR10A, MIR128B, MIR143, MIR152, MIR15A, MIR15B, MIR16-1, MIR195, MIR199B, MIR19A, MIR19B1, MIR218-1, MIR218-2, MIR23B, MIR26A-1, MIR29C, MIR30B, MIR30D, MIR320, MIR34A, MIR34B | MIR130B, MIR141, MIR182, MIR19A, MIR19B1, MIR19B2, MIR200C, MIR222, MIR92A1, MIR92A2 | MIR15A, MIR16-1, MIR19A, MIR19B1 | |
The symbol * indicates those mature MIRs that could be encoded by different pre-MIR genes, localized in different genomic positions.
Figure 11AM proteomics in cancer. Panel A: Expression matrix of AM proteins in cancer. Up regulated proteins are depicted in red, down regulated proteins in green. Panel B: Percentage of dysregulated AM proteins in cancer.
AM genes with concordant transcriptome and proteome dysregulation in cancer
| BNIP1+, CSE1L+, EP300+, IL18+, LGALS3BP+, NTRK1+, STAT1+, TP53+, CD44-, RELA-, STAT5A-, STAT5B- | |
| CDKN2A+, HTATIP2-, PTPN13- | |
| AATF+, ANGPTL4+, CASP10+, CASP9+, CCNE1+, CD44+, LGALS1+, LGALS3+, RIPK1+ | |
| AATF+, ACIN1+, BAK1+, BCL2+, BCL2L13+, CASP2+, CCNE1+, CDC2L1+, CSF2RB+, CYCS+, FADD+, GRB2+, IL1A+, JAK1+, MAPK1+, NMI+, STAT1+, STAT3+, TRAF6+, CREBBP-, GZMB-, IL6ST-, MCL1-, TNFSF10- | |
| BAK1+, CD44+, EP300+, LGALS1+, LGALS3+, MAPK1+, TNFRSF1B+, DAP3- | |
| BAK1+, CD44+, EP300+, LGALS1+, LGALS3+, MAPK1+, TNFRSF1B+, DAP3- | |
| ACIN1+, BBC3+, BCL2+, BID+, BIRC5+, CASP6+, CCNE1+, CHUK+, CSE1L+, CUL4B+, CYCS+, DAXX+, GRB2+, HRAS+, IL1R1+, MAPK8+, MOAP1+, PDCD4+, PYCARD+, RB1+, TRAF2+, AKT1-, ANGPTL4-, ATM-, CASP8-, CLU-, CREBBP-, CUL3-, DFFB-, HTATIP2-, MMP11-, NFKBIA-, NTRK1- | |
| ATM+, B4GALT1+, BAK1+, BAX+, NTRK1+, PIK3R1+, STAT1+ | |
| BAD+, CD44+, LGALS3+, LGALS3BP+, RELA+, SRC+, STAT1+, STAT3+, CLU-, PDCD4- | |
| BAD+, BCL10+, CASP10+, CUL3+, CYCS+, FADD+, JAK1+, MALT1+, CD44-, LGALS3-, LGALS3BP- | |
| RIPK1+, TRAF2+, CD44- | |
| BCL10+, CD44+, CDKN2A+, SRC+, STAT1+, STAT3+, PDCD4- | |
+ indicates up regulation, – indicates down regulation.
Figure 12Superimposition of genome/transcriptome/proteome alterations of AM genes. Panel A: Overlapping between AM transcriptome and proteome dysregulations in cancer. Panel B: Overlapping between AM genome, transcriptome and proteome alterations in cancer.
AM genes mapping in frequently mutated genome regions with concordant transcriptome and proteome alterations in cancer
| NTRK1+ | BAK1+ | CD44- | BAK1+ | LGALS3+ | STAT3+ | AKT1- |
| AKT1- | NTRK1+ | LGALS3BP+ | SRC+ | ANGPTL4- | ||
| STAT1+ | RELA+ | ATM- | ||||
| SRC+ | DFFB- | |||||
| STAT1+ | HTATIP2- | |||||
| STAT3+ | NFKBIA- | |||||
| BAD+ | BCL2+ | |||||
| PDCD4- | BID+ | |||||
| CLU- | BIRC5+ | |||||
| CSE1L+ | ||||||
| CYCS+ | ||||||
| DAXX+ | ||||||
| GRB2+ | ||||||
| IL1R1+ | ||||||
| RB1+ |
The sign + indicates the potential gain according to CGH data and up regulation in transcripts and proteins, while – indicates the potential loss according to CGH and down regulation of transcripts and proteins.
Figure 13Proteome alteration of regulators of apoptosis. Panel A: Positive regulators of AM. Panel B: Negative regulators of AM.
Figure 14Correlation between mutated links and transcriptome alterations. The X-axis represents the distribution classes of AM network genes (without mutations), based on the number of the cancer mutated genes linked to a specific gene. The Y-axis represents the weighted average of the altered transcriptome AM genes for each class.
Figure 15Correlation between drug targeting and betweenness of nodes. yFiles Circular Layout of AM network that emphasizes the nodes with high betweenness. The nodes with high betweenness are localized on the left half of the circle (blue colour and highest density of the edges). These proteins are characterized by their propensity to be drug targets, as shown with the major size of nodes.
Figure 16Apoptosis induced by drugs. Panel A: Kinetics and extent of apoptosis induction after exposure of K562 cells to 1 μM Imatinib (as determined through the annexin test and FACS analysis). Panel B: Kinetics and extent of apoptosis induction after exposure of SH-SY5Y cells to 3 μM of Fenretinide. Panel C: Modification of the AM transcriptome in K562 and SH-SY5Y after drug treatment (see Materials and Methods). Panel D: Modification of the expression of AM cancer candidates (i.e., previously identified as potentially involved in the pathogenesis of specific cancers) as opposed to that of other AM genes, presumed not to be involved in the process (i.e., not candidates) during apoptosis induction in K562 and SH-SY5Y.