| Literature DB >> 32182843 |
Ruqaia Abbas1, Sarit Larisch1.
Abstract
Inhibitors of apoptosis (IAPs) are a family of proteins that regulate cell death and inflammation. XIAP (X-linked IAP) is the only family member that suppresses apoptosis by directly binding to and inhibiting caspases. On the other hand, cIAPs suppress the activation of the extrinsic apoptotic pathway by preventing the formation of pro-apoptotic signaling complexes. IAPs are negatively regulated by IAP-antagonist proteins such as Smac/Diablo and ARTS. ARTS can promote apoptosis by binding and degrading XIAP via the ubiquitin proteasome-system (UPS). Smac can induce the degradation of cIAPs but not XIAP. Many types of cancer overexpress IAPs, thus enabling tumor cells to evade apoptosis. Therefore, IAPs, and in particular XIAP, have become attractive targets for cancer therapy. In this review, we describe the differences in the mechanisms of action between Smac and ARTS, and we summarize efforts to develop cancer therapies based on mimicking Smac and ARTS. Several Smac-mimetic small molecules are currently under evaluation in clinical trials. Initial efforts to develop ARTS-mimetics resulted in a novel class of compounds, which bind and degrade XIAP but not cIAPs. Smac-mimetics can target tumors with high levels of cIAPs, whereas ARTS-mimetics are expected to be effective for cancers with high levels of XIAP.Entities:
Keywords: ARTS; IAP antagonist; Smac; XIAP; apoptosis; cIAPs; cancer therapy; small molecules
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32182843 PMCID: PMC7140716 DOI: 10.3390/cells9030663
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Comparison of the two IAP-antagonists Smac and ARTS.
| Criteria | ARTS | Smac |
|---|---|---|
| Sub-cellular localization | Mitochondrial outer-membrane [ | Mitochondrial inner membrane space [ |
| Requirement for MOMP | Acts upstream of MOMP [ | Acts downstream of MOMP [ |
| Translocation/release from mitochondria to the cytosol | Caspase-independent, occurs within minutes after apoptotic stimuli [ | Caspase-dependent, occurs hours after apoptotic stimuli [ |
| Binding to BIR3/XIAP | ✓ [ | ✓ [ |
| Different binding sites within BIR3/XIAP | BIR3/XIAP (aa 272–292) [ | BIR3/XIAP (aa Leu307, Trp310,Glu314,Trp323, Gly306) [ |
| Containing different binding sequences to XIAP | Contains a unique C-terminal sequence (AIBM) [ | Contains an IBM (AVPI/F) sequence [ |
| Degradation of XIAP via the ubiquitin proteasome-system | ✓ [ | X [ |
| Degradation of cIAPs via the ubiquitin proteasome-system | X [ | ✓ [ |
| Over-expression phenotype | Sufficient to induce apoptotic cell death in a variety of cultured cell lines [ | Enhances apoptosis in combination with additional apoptotic stimuli [ |
| Knockout (KO) mouse phenotype | Sept4/ARTS deficiency promotes spontaneous tumorigenesis. | Smac deficiency does not cause spontaneous tumorigenesis [ |
Figure 1Schematic representation of the role of ARTS and Smac in induction of apoptosis. A. Intrinsic mitochondrial pathway: Initiation phase: Upon induction of apoptosis, ARTS binds directly to XIAP and brings it into a ternary complex with Bcl-2. This stimulates ubiquitin-proteasome-mediated degradation of Bcl-2 and XIAP resulting in de-repression of pre-apoptosome active caspases. Amplification phase: According to this model, non-lethal amounts of active caspases, cleave Bid (and possibly other pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members) and promote mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization MOMP). During MOMP, Smac/Diablo (Smac) and cytochrome c (Cyto c) are released from the inner membrane space of the mitochondria into the cytosol. This further stimulates the activation of caspases, and contributes to a cascade of caspase activation-amplification loop. Smac binds to XIAP and promote degradation of cIAPs which results in caspase activation. cIAPs also interact with TRAF and help activate the TNFR signaling pathway. B. Extrinsic pathway: Death ligands binding to death receptors cause the activation of caspases and cell death. The extrinsic and intrinsic pathways crosstalk via caspase-induced-cleavage of BID. Truncated Bid (tBID) promotes MOMP and further activation of caspases leading to apoptosis. Figures were generated using biorender.com.
Figure 2Models for Smac-mimetic (SM) and ARTS-mimetic (AM) mode of action. (A) Smac-mimetic (SM) mode of action. Treatment with Smac mimetics inhibits the NF-κB canonical pathway (right) by binding and degrading cIAPs. This prevents the ubiquitylation of RIPK1 (non-degradative, brown Ub) and leads to the formation of a complex containing RIPK1, caspase 8, and FADD, which promotes apoptosis. In addition, Smac mimetics-induced-degradation of cIAPs prevent the degradation of NIK (NF-κB inducing kinase), which in turn stabilizes NIK and activates the non-canonical NF-κB pathway (left). The stabilized NIK phosphorylates IKKα, which in turn phosphorylates p100 and generates the p52 protein. RelB-p52 heterodimers then translocate to the nucleus and activate the expression of NF-kB pro-apoptotic target genes. NF-kB-mediated-induction of TNFα results in activation of the TNF-receptor (TNFR) extrinsic pathway. This activation induces formation of the complex containing RIPK1, caspase-8, and FADD, which promotes apoptosis. Cells expressing high levels of RIPK3 undergo necroptosis. Smac mimetics can also bind XIAP and hence may contribute to de-repression of caspases to induce apoptosis. Figures were generated using biorender.com. (B) ARTS-mimetics (AM) mode of action. AM bind XIAP, which may induce an allosteric conformational change resulting in activation of XIAP E3 ligase activity. This leads to auto-ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation of XIAP. In addition, the XIAP-AM complex can bring XIAP into close proximity with Bcl-2 which allows its ubiquitylation and proteasome-mediated degradation leading to apoptosis. Figures were generated using biorender.com.