| Literature DB >> 28177918 |
Ping Li1,2,3, Libin Zhou1, Ting Zhao1,2,3, Xiongxiong Liu1,2,3, Pengcheng Zhang1,2,3,4, Yan Liu1,2,3,4, Xiaogang Zheng1,2,3,4, Qiang Li1,2,3.
Abstract
As the most intensively studied initiator caspase, caspase-9 is a key player in the intrinsic or mitochondrial pathway which is involved in various stimuli, including chemotherapies, stress agents and radiation. Caspase-9 is activated on the apoptosome complex to remain catalytic status and is thought of involving homo-dimerization monomeric zymogens. Failing to activate caspase-9 has profound physiological and pathophysiological outcomes, leading to degenerative and developmental disorders even cancer. To govern the apoptotic commitment process appropriately, plenty of proteins and small molecules involved in regulating caspase-9. Therefore, this review is to summarize recent pertinent literature on the comprehensive description of the molecular events implicated in caspase-9 activation and inhibition, as well as the clinical trials in progress to give deep insight into caspase-9 for suppressing cancer. We hope that our concerns will be helpful for further clinical studies addressing the roles of caspase-9 and its regulators demanded to identify more effective solutions to overcome intrinsic apoptosis-related diseases especially cancer.Entities:
Keywords: alternative splicing; apoptosis; caspase-9; iCasp9; phosphorylation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28177918 PMCID: PMC5410359 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1The diagram of human caspase-9
A. Exons are numbered inside the boxes and their lengths are shown on top. B. The predicted amino acid structure is depicted with the translated regions marked with different colors. Exon regions transcribed but not translated are depicted as white boxes. The three major domains are shaded: the pro-domain (within which the CARD domain is located, also called adaptor domain), the large subunit catalytic domain (LSCD), as well as the small subunit catalytic domain (SSCD, both LSCD and SSCD are also called catalytic domain). The linker domain (LD) is also indicated. The location of amino acid residues involved in the proteolytic processing of the procaspase-9 molecule is shown as well as the sites targeted for post-translational modification.
Figure 2Regulation of caspase-9 by endogenous regulators in different signalling pathways
Following cytochrome c release from mitochondria, a heptameric wheel-like multimeric complex, the apoptosome, induced and composed by Apaf-1 and procaspase-9. Factors such as ATP, can inhibit this process by directly inhibiting the interaction between Apaf-1 and cytochrome c. Recruitment of procaspase-9 to the apoptosome is antagonized by TUNCAN, and stimulated by NAC/DEFCAP. HAX-1 may inhibit caspase-9 activation, thereby suppressing apoptosis in cardiac myocytes. Direct phosphorylation at Thr125 by ERK1/2 (growth/survival signals), CDK1-cyclin B1 (in mitosis), p38αMAPK (upon hyperosmotic stress) and DYRK1A (in development and upon hyperosmotic stress) inhibits caspase-9 activity. PKCξ also inhibits phosphorylation of caspase-9 at Ser144 induced by hyperosmotic stress. Akt/PKB, as a protein kinase, suppresses the activation of caspase-9 in response to extracellular growth/survival signals. The interactions of HBIXP and XIAP with survivin block the activation of caspase-9 through distinct mechanisms. PKA seems to block the recruitment of caspase-9 to apoptosome rather than inhibitory effect on caspase-9 activation (unclear). CK2 phosphorylates caspase-9 at Ser348 to protect from caspase-8 cleavage in mouse, but not conserved in humans. Nitrosylation of caspase-9 by the donor of NO suggests cleavage inhibition of procaspase-9 and consequently apoptosis. Conversely, phosphorylation at Tyr153 by c-Abl stimulates activiation of caspase-9. Nucling recruits and transports the apoptosome when responding to the apoptosis induced by stresses. See text for more details.
Endogenous regulators of caspase-9
| Efficacy | Factor | Target | Mechanism of action | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition | ERK2 | Caspase-9 (Thr125-P) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ |
| DYRK1A | Caspase-9 (Thr125-P) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ | |
| CDK1/cyclin B1 | Caspase-9 (Thr125-P) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ | |
| P38α MAPK | Caspase-9 (Thr125-P; most likely indirect) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ | |
| Akt/PKB | Caspase-9 (Ser196-P) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ | |
| PKCξ | Caspase-9 (Ser144-P) | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing | [ | |
| PKA | Caspase-9(Ser99-P, Ser183-P, Ser195-P, but not required) | Inhibiting caspase-9 recruitment to the apoptosome? Unclear. | [ | |
| CK2 | Caspase-9 (Ser302-P, Ser307-P and Ser310-P) unclear | Inhibiting caspase-9 processing in murine cells. Unclear in human cells. | [ | |
| XIAP | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting processed caspase-9 | [ | |
| TUCAN | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting Apaf-1–caspase-9 interaction | [ | |
| HBXIP | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting Apaf-1–caspase-9 interaction as HBXIP–survivin complex | [ | |
| HAX-1 | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting caspase-9 activity | [ | |
| NO | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting caspase-9 activity by nitrosylation | [ | |
| Enhancement | c-Abl | Caspase-9 | Enhancing caspase-9 processing | [ |
| Nucling | Caspase-9 | Enhancing apoptosome stability; transports to nucleus | [ | |
| NAC/DEFCAP | Apaf-1 and Caspase-9 | Enhancing caspase-9 recruitment to the apoptosome; mechanism unclear. | [ |
MicroRNAs regulating caspase-9
| Factor | Target | Mechanism of action | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| miRNA-24a | Apaf-1 and caspase-9 | Inhibiting caspase-9 and Apaf-1 activities | [ |
| miRNA-582-5p | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting caspase-9 expression at both protein and mRNA levels | [ |
| miRNA-23a | Caspase-9 | Inhibiting caspase-9 activity | [ |
Figure 3Alternative splice variants of human caspase-9
A. Nucleotide alignment of human caspase-9a with caspase-9b. The bases marked with red color show the identical sequence of both caspase-9a and caspase-9b while the single-line bases in black color represent the alternative splicing sites. The alignment is processed by the online multiple-sequence alignment software MultAlin. B. Deduced structural comparison of the human caspase-9a and caspase-9b is presented. The two sequences refer to the Refseq. NM_001229.4 (caspase-9a) and NM_001278054.1 (caspase-9b). As indicated in the diagram, caspase-9b/9S lacks the entire large subunit catalytic domain (LSCD) found in the full-length protein. The aligned amino acid sequences are depicted with the translated regions marked with different colors. Exon regions transcribed but not translated are depicted as white boxes.
Figure 4The apoptosis of transduced cells incurred by activated iCasp9
A. iCasp9 is formed by connecting a drug-binding domain, FKBP12-F36V with Δcaspase9 via a SGGGS linker. Binding of small CID (AP1903 or AP20187) leads to dimerization of iCas9, thereby relaying activation signals and initiating mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. B. The bicistronic transgene, iCaps9.2A.ΔCD19, comprises iCasp9 sequence, linked via a short 2A-like sequence, with truncated CD19 using as a selectable marker.