Literature DB >> 9490001

Caspase-mediated proteolysis during apoptosis: insights from apoptotic neutrophils.

D M Sanghavi1, M Thelen, N A Thornberry, L Casciola-Rosen, A Rosen.   

Abstract

Apoptosis is initiated by activation of caspases (interleukin 1beta-converting enzyme homologues), which cause coordinated cleavage of several death substrates that function in structural or homeostatic pathways. The relationship between substrate cleavage and apoptosis is not yet known, nor is it clear whether cleavage of specific substrates is a critical requirement for apoptosis. The human neutrophil provides novel insights into the roles of proteolysis of specific substrates during apoptosis, since only a subset of caspase substrates are present in mature neutrophils. Of the death substrates we screened, PARP, the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NuMA), the 70 kDa subunit of the U1 small ribonucleoprotein (U1-70kDa) and the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK(CS)) were not detected in non-apoptotic neutrophils; in contrast, lamin B and fodrin were present in amounts similar to those found in other cells. Caspase-3 activity was absent in freshly isolated neutrophils, but was detected when neutrophils were aged in vitro, coincident with the onset of morphologic and biochemical apoptosis. The absence of PARP, NuMA, U1-70kDa and DNA-PK(CS) in non-apoptotic neutrophils suggests that these are not critical anti-apoptotic proteins, and that their fragments are not required components of the neutrophil apoptotic pathway. These studies highlight the conserved role of caspase activation in the apoptotic mechanism, and focus attention on several conserved structural substrates as potential transducers of the proteolytic signal in apoptosis.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9490001     DOI: 10.1016/s0014-5793(98)00004-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FEBS Lett        ISSN: 0014-5793            Impact factor:   4.124


  17 in total

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10.  Differential activity of caspase-3 regulates susceptibility of lung and breast tumor cell lines to Paclitaxel.

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