| Literature DB >> 23301705 |
Mayur V Jain1, Anna M Paczulla, Thomas Klonisch, Florence N Dimgba, Sahana B Rao, Karin Roberg, Frank Schweizer, Claudia Lengerke, Padideh Davoodpour, Vivek R Palicharla, Subbareddy Maddika, Marek Łos.
Abstract
The rapid accumulation of knowledge on apoptosis regulation in the 1990s was followed by the development of several experimental anticancer- and anti-ischaemia (stroke or myocardial infarction) drugs. Activation of apoptotic pathways or the removal of cellular apoptotic inhibitors has been suggested to aid cancer therapy and the inhibition of apoptosis was thought to limit ischaemia-induced damage. However, initial clinical studies on apoptosis-modulating drugs led to unexpected results in different clinical conditions and this may have been due to co-effects on non-apoptotic interconnected cell death mechanisms and the 'yin-yang' role of autophagy in survival versus cell death. In this review, we extend the analysis of cell death beyond apoptosis. Upon introduction of molecular pathways governing autophagy and necrosis (also called necroptosis or programmed necrosis), we focus on the interconnected character of cell death signals and on the shared cell death processes involving mitochondria (e.g. mitophagy and mitoptosis) and molecular signals playing prominent roles in multiple pathways (e.g. Bcl2-family members and p53). We also briefly highlight stress-induced cell senescence that plays a role not only in organismal ageing but also offers the development of novel anticancer strategies. Finally, we briefly illustrate the interconnected character of cell death forms in clinical settings while discussing irradiation-induced mitotic catastrophe. The signalling pathways are discussed in their relation to cancer biology and treatment approaches.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23301705 PMCID: PMC3823134 DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.12001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Fig. 1Death-receptor family signalling. Two types of signalling complexes can form at death receptors. Death-inducing signalling complexes known as DISCs are formed at CD95, TRAIL R-1 or TRAIL R-2. These receptors recruit DISCs that have a similar basic composition (FADD, pro-caspases-8). DISC complexes allow caspase-8 activation and transduction of the apoptotic signal. The second group comprises the TNFR1/DR3/DR6 and EDAR receptors which recruit a different set of molecules (please see text for details) that transduces both apoptotic and survival signals.
Classification of Bcl2 family proteins. Bcl2 family proteins are classified according to their BH domain and their function (see text for details)
| BH domains present | Bcl2 family members | Function |
|---|---|---|
| BH(1-2-3-4) [ | BCL2 | All Anti-apoptotic |
| BCL-XL | ||
| BCL2-L1 | ||
| BCL2-L2 /BCL-W | ||
| BCL2-L10 | ||
| BCL2-L12 | ||
| BCL2-L13 | ||
| BH (2, 4) [ | BCL-XES | Anti-apoptotic |
| BCL-XAK | Pro-apoptotic | |
| BH (1,2) [ | BCL-B | Anti-apoptotic |
| BH (2,3) [ | BCL-GL | All Pro-apoptotic |
| BFK | ||
| BH (1-2-3) [ | MCL1 | Anti-apoptotic |
| BAK1 | Pro-apoptotic | |
| BAX | Pro-apoptotic | |
| BOK/MTD | Pro-apoptotic | |
| BCL2-A1/BFL-1 | Anti-apoptotic | |
| BH (1-2-4) [ | BCL2-L10/BOO/DIVA | Anti-apoptotic |
| BH (3) [ | BCL-XS | All Pro-apoptotic |
| BAD | ||
| BID | ||
| BIM/BOD | ||
| HRK/DP5 | ||
| BCL2-L11 | ||
| BNIP-1, -2, -3 | ||
| BIK/NBK | ||
| BLK | ||
| PMAIP1/Noxa, MAP-1 | ||
| BMF | ||
| BBC3/Puma | ||
| NIX | ||
| Beclin1/Atg6 | ||
| ApoL1 |
Fig. 2Schematic pathway of different steps of autophagy. Autophagy is initiated by the nucleation of an isolation membrane or phagophore. Autophagy is subdivided into induction, elongation and maturation steps and the role of Atg proteins and Bcl2 anti-apoptotic proteins is shown in each step. Beclin1 and its interrelating associate, class III PI3-K, are required for autophagy induction. Bcl2 anti-apoptotic proteins (Bcl2/Bcl-XL) can attach to Beclin1 and inhibit autophagy. Class I PI3K can negatively control autophagy through mTOR. The initiated isolation membrane (phagophore) then elongates and closes on itself to form an autophagosome. During starvation, this process is initiated by the ULK1/2 complex, the activity of which is controlled by the mTORC1 complex. The Beclin1/hVps34/Atg14L complex, Atg9L1 and WIPI proteins (human orthologs of the yeast Atg18) contribute to the nucleation of the phagophore. Atg12 pathway and LC3 (Atg8) lipidation control the elongation and shape of autophagosomes. Atg12 is essential for the formation of autophagosomal precursors and membrane isolation. Atg7 activates Atg12; activated Atg12 is transferred to Atg10 and conjugated to Atg5 and, finally, a complex is formed with Atg16. The Atg12–Atg5–Atg16 complex is required for recruitment of LC3-II. After autophagosome formation, Atg4 cleaves LC3-II to generate LC3-I. Atg7 activates LC3-I and transfers it to Atg3. The remaining membrane-attached LC3-II is degraded by lysosomal proteases. Rab7, SNARES and ESCRT are involved in the intracellular trafficking along the endocytic pathway. LAMP-1/2 and ATPases are membrane constituents of the endolysosomal compartment. DRAM protein is a lysosomal membrane protein. The Beclin1-hVps34-UVRAG complex positively regulates the maturation of autophagosomes. When associated with the protein Rubicon, it down-regulates autophagosome maturation.
Fig. 3Regulation of autophagy. Autophagy regulation is strongly connected to signalling pathways that promote both cell proliferation (i.e. Ras, PI3-K/Akt) and cellular metabolism (i.e. S6K; please see the text for details).
Interrelations between necrosis, autophagy and apoptosis
| Autophagy facilitates apoptosis | Autophagy antagonizes apoptosis & necrosis | Autophagy cooperates with apoptosis |
|---|---|---|
| - Maintenance of ATP levels & ‘Eat me’ signal (Phosphatidylserine exposure) | - Energy and nutrient supply (esp. ATP) | - Although separate processes, they may progress in parallel (but apoptosis progresses at faster pace) |
| - Elements of autophagic machinery are involved in membrane blebbing | - Removal of harmful protein aggregates | - Autophagy upstream of apoptosis: regulation of caspase activity in some systems |
| - Lysophosphatidylcholine secretion: dead cell clearance/ engulfment | - Prevention of anoikis | - Autophagic cell death is only evident in the absence of apoptosis |
| - Hyperactivated autophagy may initiate apoptosis |