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1.
In leukemia cells, hyperthermia enhances tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis. The phenomenon is caspase-dependent and results in membrane changes leading to an increased recognition of TRAIL death receptors by TRAIL. Because either caspase-2 or an apical proteolytic event has been recently proposed to act as an initiator of the cell death mechanism induced by heat shock, we have investigated the hierarchy of caspase activation in cells exposed to the combined heat shock plus TRAIL treatment. We report here that caspases-2, -3, and -8 were the first caspases to be activated. As expected, caspase-8 is required and indispensable during the initiation of this death signaling. Caspase-2 may also participate in the phenomenon but, in contrast to caspase-8, its presence appears dispensable because its depletion by small interfering RNA is devoid of effects. Our observations also suggest a role of caspase-3 and of a particular cleaved form of this caspase during the early signals of heat shock plus TRAIL-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

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3.
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) A549 cells are resistant to tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis. Therefore, combination therapy using sensitizing agents to overcome TRAIL resistance may provide new strategies for treatment of NSCLC. Here, we investigated whether lithium chloride (LiCl), a drug for mental illness, could sensitize A549 cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. We observed that LiCl significantly enhanced A549 cells apoptosis through up-regulation of death receptors DR4 and DR5 and activation of caspase cascades. In addition, G2/M arrest induced by LiCl also contributed to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Concomitantly, LiCl strongly inhibited the activity of c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs), and the inhibition of JNKs by SP600125 also induced G2/M arrest and augmented cell death caused by TRAIL or TRAIL plus LiCl. However, glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) inhibition was not involved in TRAIL sensitization induced by LiCl. Collectively, these findings indicated that LiCl sensitized A549 cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis through caspases-dependent apoptotic pathway via death receptors signaling and G2/M arrest induced by inhibition of JNK activation, but independent of GSK3β.  相似文献   

4.
Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha family of cytokines that preferentially induces apoptosis in transformed cells, making it a promising cancer therapy. However, many neoplasms are resistant to TRAIL-induced apoptosis by mechanisms that are poorly understood. We demonstrate that the expression of the small heat shock protein alpha B-crystallin (but not other heat shock proteins or apoptosis-regulating proteins) correlates with TRAIL resistance in a panel of human cancer cell lines. Stable expression of wild-type alpha B-crystallin, but not a pseudophosphorylation mutant impaired in its assembly and chaperone function, protects cancer cells from TRAIL-induced caspase-3 activation and apoptosis in vitro. Furthermore, selective inhibition of alpha B-crystallin expression by RNA interference sensitizes cancer cells to TRAIL. In addition, wild-type alpha B-crystallin promotes xenograft tumor growth and inhibits TRAIL-induced apoptosis in vivo in nude mice, whereas a pseudophosphorylation alpha B-crystallin mutant impaired in its anti-apoptotic function inhibits xenograft tumor growth. Collectively, these findings indicate that alpha B-crystallin is a novel regulator of TRAIL-induced apoptosis and tumor growth. Moreover, these results demonstrate that targeted inhibition of alpha B-crystallin promotes TRAIL-induced apoptosis, thereby suggesting a novel strategy to overcome TRAIL resistance in cancer.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies have shown that activation of NF-kappaB can inhibit apoptosis induced by a number of stimuli. It is also known that TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) can activate NF-kappaB through the death receptors TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2, and decoy receptor TRAIL-R4. In view of these findings, we have investigated the extent to which activation of NF-kappaB may account for the variable responses of melanoma lines to apoptosis induced by TRAIL and other TNF family members. Pretreatment of the melanoma lines with the proteasome inhibitor N-acetyl-L-leucinyl-L-leucinyl-L-norleucinal (LLnL), which is known to inhibit activation of NF-kappaB, was shown to markedly increase apoptosis in 10 of 12 melanoma lines with death receptors for TRAIL. The specificity of results for inhibition of NF-kappaB activation was supported by an increase of TRAIL-induced apoptosis in melanoma cells transfected with a degradation-resistant IkappaBalpha. Furthermore, studies with NF-kappaB reporter constructs revealed that the resistance of melanoma lines to TRAIL-induced apoptosis was correlated to activation of NF-kappaB in response to TRAIL. TRAIL-resistant sublines that were generated by intermittent exposure to TRAIL were shown to have high levels of activated NF-kappaB, and resistance to TRAIL could be reversed by LLnL and by the superrepressor form of IkappaBalpha. Therefore, these results suggest that activation of NF-kappaB by TRAIL plays an important role in resistance of melanoma cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis and further suggest that inhibitors of NF-kappaB may be useful adjuncts in clinical use of TRAIL against melanoma.  相似文献   

6.
TRAIL resistance in many cancer cells is one of the major problems in TRAIL-based cancer therapy. Thus, the agents that can sensitize the tumor cells to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis are strictly needed for the improvement of anti-cancer effect of TRAIL. Acrolein is a byproduct of lipid peroxidation, which has been involved in pulmonary, cardiac and neurodegenerative diseases. We investigated whether acrolein, an α,β-unsaturated aldehyde, can potentiate TRAIL-induced apoptosis in human renal cancer cells. The combined treatment with acrolein and TRAIL significantly induced apoptosis, and stimulated of caspase-3 activity, DNA fragmentation, and cleavage of PARP. We found that acrolein down-regulated the protein level of Bcl-2 and Bcl-2 overexpression inhibited the cell death induced by the combined treatment with acrolein and TRAIL. In addition, acrolein up-regulated C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) and TRAIL death receptor 5 (DR5) and down-regulation of CHOP or DR5 expression using the respective small interfering RNA significantly attenuated the apoptosis induced by acrolein plus TRAIL. Interestingly, pretreatment with an antioxidant, N-acetylcysteine (NAC), inhibited not only CHOP and DR5 up-regulation but also the cell death induced by acrolein plus TRAIL. Taken together, our results demonstrated that acrolein enhances TRAIL-induced apoptosis in Caki cells through down-regulation of Bcl-2 and ROS dependent up-regulation of DR5.  相似文献   

7.
Whether celastrol, a triterpene from traditional Chinese medicine, can modulate the anticancer effects of TRAIL, the cytokine that is currently in clinical trial, was investigated. As indicated by assays that measure plasma membrane integrity, phosphatidylserine exposure, mitochondrial activity, and activation of caspase-8, caspase-9, and caspase-3, celastrol potentiated the TRAIL-induced apoptosis in human breast cancer cells, and converted TRAIL-resistant cells to TRAIL-sensitive cells. When examined for its mechanism, we found that the triterpene down-regulated the expression of cell survival proteins including cFLIP, IAP-1, Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, survivin, and XIAP and up-regulated Bax expression. In addition, we found that celastrol induced the cell surface expression of both the TRAIL receptors DR4 and DR5. This increase in receptors was noted in a wide variety of cancer cells including breast, lung, colorectal, prostate, esophageal, and pancreatic cancer cells, and myeloid and leukemia cells. Gene silencing of the death receptor abolished the effect of celastrol on TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Induction of the death receptor by the triterpenoid was found to be p53-independent but required the induction of CAAT/enhancer-binding protein homologous protein (CHOP), inasmuch as gene silencing of CHOP abolished the induction of DR5 expression by celastrol and associated enhancement of TRAIL-induced apoptosis. We found that celastrol also induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and ROS sequestration inhibited celastrol-induced expression of CHOP and DR5, and consequent sensitization to TRAIL. Overall, our results demonstrate that celastrol can potentiate the apoptotic effects of TRAIL through down-regulation of cell survival proteins and up-regulation of death receptors via the ROS-mediated up-regulation of CHOP pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Heat shock protects HCT116 and H460 cells from TRAIL-induced apoptosis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Heat shock proteins have been shown to protect cells from a variety of stressful conditions, including hyperthermia, oxidative and DNA damage, serum withdrawal, and a variety of chemicals. HSP27, HSP70, and HSP90 have been shown to downregulate different aspects of apoptosome assembly. TRAIL is a member of the TNF family of ligands and is a promising anti-cancer agent. It has been shown to be nontoxic to most normal cell types, while it is a potent killer of many different cancer cells. TRAIL engages both the receptor-mediated (extrinsic) and the mitochondria-initiated (intrinsic) cascades. We tested whether heat shock affects TRAIL-induced apoptosis in different cancer cells. TRAIL treatment does not induce HSP27, HSP70, or HSP90 levels. Nonetheless, when treated with TRAIL for 3 h after release from heat shock, the human colon cancer cell line HCT116 is protected from apoptosis whereas the human colon cancer cell line SW480 is not. This pattern is consistent with the previously observed behavior of HCT116 as Type II cells that depend on mitochondrial signaling and SW480 as Type I, whose TRAIL-induced death is not sensitive to inhibition of caspase 9. Moreover, the failure of heat shock to protect SW480 cells is not due to a lack of HSP70 or HSP90 upregulation. HSP70 and HSP90 are induced 3 h after release from heat shock, whereas HSP27 is induced much later. Thus, the observed protective effect against TRAIL is probably due to the anti-apoptotic effects of HSP70 and HSP90. These results further illustrate interactions between TRAIL receptor signaling and the intrinsic cell death pathway and have practical implications for the potential use of TRAIL and hyperthermia in cancer therapy.  相似文献   

9.
The impact of low-dose ultraviolet light (UV-light) on apoptotic susceptibility of keratinocytes (KCs) induced by TRAIL is unclear. Skin expresses a functional form of TRAIL, and while sun exposure influences TRAIL death receptors, a role for decoy receptors has not been evaluated. Unraveling mechanisms involving apoptotic sensitivity of KCs is important because skin is the first target of UV-light, and a site for commonly occurring cancers. Since apoptosis is a homeostatic process eliminating UV-light induced DNA damaged cells, elucidating molecular events regulating apoptosis enhances understanding of cutaneous photocarcinogenesis. Here we demonstrate low-dose UV-light enhances susceptibility of KCs to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Low-dose UV-light selectively reduces decoy receptors, without influencing death receptor levels. UV-induced enhanced apoptotic susceptibility was reduced by over-expression of decoy receptor TRAIL-R4, but not TRAIL-R3; or treatment with thiol compound pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC), which also enhanced TRAIL-R4 levels. Besides influencing decoy receptors, low-dose UV-light plus TRAIL also synergistically promoted cytochrome c and Smac release from mitochondria. Inhibitors directed against caspases 2, 3, 8, and 9 reduced the synergistic apoptotic response following low-dose UV-light plus TRAIL exposure; as did forced over-expression of Bcl-x and dominant negative (DN) constructs of FADD and caspase 9. Thus, relative levels of decoy receptors significantly influence susceptibility of KCs to TRAIL-induced apoptosis with concomitant low-dose UV-light exposure; in addition to the apoptotic pathway mediated by mitochondrial permeabilization.  相似文献   

10.
Death receptor 5 (DR5/TRAIL-R2) is an apoptosis-inducing membrane receptor for tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL). In this study, we show that rosiglitazone sensitizes human renal cancer cells to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis, but not normal human mesangial cells. Furthermore, because rosiglitazone-enhanced TRAIL-mediated apoptosis is induced in various types of cancer cells but is not interrupted by Bcl-2 overexpression, this combinatory treatment may provide an attractive strategy for cancer treatment. We found that treatment with rosiglitazone significantly induces DR5 expression at both its mRNA and its protein levels, accompanying the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Both treatment with DR5/Fc chimeric protein and silencing of DR5 expression using small interfering RNAs attenuated rosiglitazone plus TRAIL-induced apoptosis, showing the critical role of DR5 in this cell death. Pretreatment with GSH significantly inhibited rosiglitazone-induced DR5 up-regulation and the cell death induced by the combined treatment with rosiglitazone and TRAIL, suggesting that ROS mediate rosiglitazone-induced DR5 up-regulation, contributing to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis. However, both DR5 up-regulation and sensitization of TRAIL-mediated apoptosis induced by rosiglitazone are likely PPARgamma-independent, because a dominant-negative mutant of PPARgamma and a potent PPARgamma inhibitor, GW9662, failed to block DR5 induction and apoptosis. Interestingly, we also found that rosiglitazone treatment induced down-regulation of cellular FLICE-inhibitory protein (c-FLIPs), and ectopic expression of c-FLIPs attenuated rosiglitazone plus TRAIL-mediated apoptosis, demonstrating the involvement of c-FLIPs in this apoptosis. Taken together, the results of this study demonstrate that rosiglitazone enhances TRAIL-induced apoptosis in various cancer cells by ROS-mediated DR5 up-regulation and down-regulation of c-FLIPs.  相似文献   

11.
Death receptors such as the 55 kDa tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor (TNF-R55) or Fas can initiate both apoptotic (caspase-dependent) and caspase-independent routes to programmed cell death (PCD). Here, we demonstrate for the first time that the single murine receptor for (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (mTRAIL-R2) can induce a caspase-independent form of PCD with necrosis-like features in addition to apoptosis. Analysis of morphological and cellular features of caspase-independent PCD in response to TRAIL and TNF suggests that mTRAIL-R2 and TNF-R55 elicit caspase-independent PCD through similar pathways, although without participation of cathepsins. Cells overexpressing acid ceramidase (AC), an enzyme that metabolizes the sphingolipid ceramide, show enhanced survival from TRAIL-induced caspase-independent PCD but not from apoptosis, implicating a function of ceramide as a key mediator in caspase-independent PCD (but not apoptosis) induced by mTRAIL-R2. In concert with the enhanced resistance of AC-overexpressing cells against caspase-independent PCD induced by TNF, our results suggest that ceramide acts as a common mediator of caspase-independent PCD caused by death receptors such as mTRAIL-R2 and TNF-R55.  相似文献   

12.
Past studies have shown that TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) induced apoptosis in a high proportion of cultured melanoma by caspase-dependent mechanisms. In the present studies we have examined whether TRAIL-induced apoptosis of melanoma was mediated by direct activation of effector caspases or whether apoptosis was dependent on changes in mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and mitochondrial-dependent pathways of apoptosis. Changes in MMP were measured by fluorescent emission from rhodamine 123 in mitochondria. TRAIL, but not TNF-alpha or Fas ligand, was shown to induce marked changes in MMP in melanoma, which showed a high correlation with TRAIL-induced apoptosis. This was associated with activation of proapoptotic protein Bid and release of cytochrome c into the cytosol. Overexpression of B cell lymphoma gene 2 (Bcl-2) inhibited TRAIL-induced release of cytochrome c, changes in MMP, and apoptosis. The pan caspase inhibitor z-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk) and the inhibitor of caspase-8 (z-Ile-Glu-Thr-Asp-fluoromethylketone; zIETD-fmk) blocked changes in MMP and apoptosis, suggesting that the changes in MMP were dependent on activation of caspase-8. Activation of caspase-9 also appeared necessary for TRAIL-induced apoptosis of melanoma. In addition, TRAIL, but not TNF-alpha or Fas ligand, was shown to induce clustering of mitochondria around the nucleus. This process was not essential for apoptosis but appeared to increase the rate of apoptosis. Taken together, these results suggest that TRAIL induces apoptosis of melanoma cells by recruitment of mitochondrial pathways to apoptosis that are dependent on activation of caspase-8. Therefore, factors that regulate the mitochondrial pathway may be important determinants of TRAIL-induced apoptosis of melanoma.  相似文献   

13.
TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand or Apo2L (Apo2L/TRAIL) is a promising anti-cancer drug owing to its ability to trigger apoptosis by binding to TRAIL-R1 or TRAIL-R2, two membrane-bound receptors that are often expressed by tumor cells. TRAIL can also bind non-functional receptors such as TRAIL-R4, but controversies still exist regarding their potential to inhibit TRAIL-induced apoptosis. We show here that TRAIL-R4, expressed either endogenously or ectopically, inhibits TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Interestingly, the combination of chemotherapeutic drugs with TRAIL restores tumor cell sensitivity to apoptosis in TRAIL-R4-expressing cells. This sensitization, which mainly occurs at the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) level, through enhanced caspase-8 recruitment and activation, is compromised by c-FLIP expression and is independent of the mitochondria. Importantly, TRAIL-R4 expression prevents TRAIL-induced tumor regression in nude mice, but tumor regression induced by TRAIL can be restored with chemotherapy. Our results clearly support a negative regulatory function for TRAIL-R4 in controlling TRAIL signaling, and unveil the ability of TRAIL-R4 to cooperate with c-FLIP to inhibit TRAIL-induced cell death.  相似文献   

14.
TRAIL causes apoptosis in numerous types of tumor cells. However, the mechanisms regulating TRAIL-induced apoptosis remain to be elucidated. We have investigated the role of PKC in regulating TRAIL-induced mitochondrial events and apoptosis in the Jurkat T cell line. We found a caspase-dependent decline in mitochondrial membrane potential and translocation of cytochrome c from mitochondria into the cytosol in response to TRAIL. Both these events were prevented by PKC activation. Moreover, PKC activation considerably reduced the activation of caspases, PARP cleavage and apoptosis when induced upon TRAIL treatment. MAPK activation was involved in the mechanism of PKC-mediated inhibition of TRAIL-induced cytochrome c release from mitochondria. Furthermore, inhibition of the MAPK pathway partially reversed the PKC-mediated inhibition of TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Besides, PKC activation may also inhibit the TRAIL-induced apoptosis through a MAPK-independent mechanism. Altogether, these results indicate a negative role of PKC in the regulation of apoptotic signals generated upon TRAIL receptor activation.  相似文献   

15.
Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a promising anticancer agent that can selectively kill cancer cells. Nonetheless, many cancers are resistant to TRAIL, and the molecular mechanisms of TRAIL resistance in cancer, particularly pancreatic cancer, are still unclear. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that quercetin, a flavonoid, induces apoptosis in TRAIL-resistant pancreatic cancer cells. Although quercetin alone had no significant cytotoxic effect, when combined with TRAIL, it promoted TRAIL-induced apoptosis that required mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization. A BH3-only protein BID knockdown dramatically attenuated TRAIL/quercetin-induced apoptosis. The expression levels of cellular FLICE-like inhibitory protein (cFLIP) decreased in a dose-dependent manner in the presence of quercetin, and overexpression of cFLIP was able to robustly rescue pancreatic cancer cells from TRAIL/quercetin-induced apoptosis. Additionally, quercetin activated c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) in a dose-dependent manner, which in turn induced the proteasomal degradation of cFLIP, and JNK activation also sensitized pancreatic cancer cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Thus, our results suggest that quercetin induces TRAIL-induced apoptosis via JNK activation-mediated cFLIP turnover.  相似文献   

16.
Carotenoids are compounds contained in foods and possess anticarcinogenic activity. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a promising candidate for cancer therapeutics due to its ability to induce apoptosis selectively in cancer cells. However, some tumors remain tolerant to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Therefore, it is important to develop agents that overcome this resistance. We show, for the first time, that certain carotenoids sensitize cancer cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Combined treatment with halocynthiaxanthin, a dietary carotenoid contained in oysters and sea squirts, and TRAIL drastically induced apoptosis in colon cancer DLD-1 cells, whereas each agent alone only slightly induced apoptosis. The combination induced nuclear condensation and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage, which are major features of apoptosis. Various caspase inhibitors could attenuate the apoptosis induced by this combination. Furthermore, the dominant-negative form of a TRAIL receptor could block the apoptosis, suggesting that halocynthiaxanthin specifically facilitated the TRAIL signaling pathway. To examine the molecular mechanism of the synergistic effect of the combined treatment, we did an RNase protection assay. Halocynthiaxanthin markedly up-regulated a TRAIL receptor, death receptor 5 (DR5), among the death receptor-related genes, suggesting a possible mechanism for the combined effects. Moreover, we examined whether other carotenoids also possess the same effects. Peridinin, but not alloxanthin, diadinochrome, and pyrrhoxanthin, induced DR5 expression and sensitized DLD-1 cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. These results indicate that the combination of certain carotenoids and TRAIL is a new strategy to overcome TRAIL resistance in cancer cells.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies indicated that signalling via CD95 and DR5 is greatly enhanced by the formation of ceramide-enriched membrane platforms. Here, we employed this concept to convert doses of subtherapeutic TRAIL that were unable to release ceramide and kill leukemic B-cells or ex vivo T lymphocytes, into a very effective apoptotic stimulus. Ceramide production was induced by application of sub-toxic doses of doxorubicin that resulted in an activation of the acid sphingomyelinase (ASM), release of ceramide and formation of ceramide-enriched membrane platforms. The latter served DR5 to cluster after application of very low doses of TRAIL in combination with doxorubicin. Genetic deficiency of the ASM abrogated doxorubicin-induced ceramide release, as well as clustering of DR5 and apoptosis induced by the combined treatment of doxorubicin and TRAIL. These data show that local release of ceramide potentiates very low, otherwise inactive doses of TRAIL that may represent a novel therapeutic concept to treat tumors.  相似文献   

18.
Development of resistance to TRAIL, an apoptosis-inducing cytokine, is one of the major problems in its development for cancer treatment. Thus, pharmacological agents that are safe and can sensitize the tumor cells to TRAIL are urgently needed. We investigated whether gossypol, a BH3 mimetic that is currently in the clinic, can potentiate TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Intracellular esterase activity, sub-G1 cell cycle arrest, and caspase-8, -9, and -3 activity assays revealed that gossypol potentiated TRAIL-induced apoptosis in human colon cancer cells. Gossypol also down-regulated cell survival proteins (Bcl-xL, Bcl-2, survivin, XIAP, and cFLIP) and dramatically up-regulated TRAIL death receptor (DR)-5 expression but had no effect on DR4 and decoy receptors. Gossypol-induced receptor induction was not cell type-specific, as DR5 induction was observed in other cell types. Deletion of DR5 by siRNA significantly reduced the apoptosis induced by TRAIL and gossypol. Gossypol induction of the death receptor required the induction of CHOP, and thus, gene silencing of CHOP abolished gossypol-induced DR5 expression and associated potentiation of apoptosis. ERK1/2 (but not p38 MAPK or JNK) activation was also required for gossypol-induced TRAIL receptor induction; gene silencing of ERK abolished both DR5 induction and potentiation of apoptosis by TRAIL. We also found that reactive oxygen species produced by gossypol treatment was critical for TRAIL receptor induction and apoptosis potentiation. Overall, our results show that gossypol enhances TRAIL-induced apoptosis through the down-regulation of cell survival proteins and the up-regulation of TRAIL death receptors through the ROS-ERK-CHOP-DR5 pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Recombinant tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is currently under clinical trials for cancer, however many tumor cells, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) develop resistance to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Hence, novel agents that can alleviate TRAIL-induced resistance are urgently needed. In the present report, we investigated the potential of emodin to enhance apoptosis induced by TRAIL in HCC cells. As observed by MTT cytotoxicity assay and the externalization of the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylserine, we found that emodin can significantly potentiate TRAIL-induced apoptosis in HCC cells. When investigated for the mechanism(s), we observed that emodin can downregulate the expression of various cell survival proteins, and induce the cell surface expression of both TRAIL receptors, death receptors (DR) 4 as well as 5. In addition, emodin increased the expression of C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) in a time-dependent manner. Knockdown of CHOP by siRNA decreased the induction of emodin-induced DR5 expression and apoptosis. Emodin-induced induction of DR5 was mediated through the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), as N-acetylcysteine blocked the induction of DR5 and the induction of apoptosis. Also, the knockdown of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein by siRNA significantly reduced the sensitization effect of emodin on TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Overall, our experimental results clearly indicate that emodin can indeed potentiate TRAIL-induced apoptosis through the downregulation of antiapoptotic proteins, increased expression of apoptotic proteins, and ROS mediated upregulation of DR in HCC cells.  相似文献   

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