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1.
The balance between cell cycle progression and apoptosis is important for both surveillance against genomic defects and responses to drugs that arrest the cell cycle. In this report, we show that the level of the human anti‐apoptotic protein Mcl‐1 is regulated during the cell cycle and peaks at mitosis. Mcl‐1 is phosphorylated at two sites in mitosis, Ser64 and Thr92. Phosphorylation of Thr92 by cyclin‐dependent kinase 1 (CDK1)–cyclin B1 initiates degradation of Mcl‐1 in cells arrested in mitosis by microtubule poisons. Mcl‐1 destruction during mitotic arrest requires proteasome activity and is dependent on Cdc20/Fizzy, which mediates recognition of mitotic substrates by the anaphase‐promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) E3 ubiquitin ligase. Stabilisation of Mcl‐1 during mitotic arrest by mutation of either Thr92 or a D‐box destruction motif inhibits the induction of apoptosis by microtubule poisons. Thus, phosphorylation of Mcl‐1 by CDK1–cyclin B1 and its APC/CCdc20‐mediated destruction initiates apoptosis if a cell fails to resolve mitosis. Regulation of apoptosis, therefore, is linked intrinsically to progression through mitosis and is governed by a temporal mechanism that distinguishes between normal mitosis and prolonged mitotic arrest.  相似文献   

2.
The initiation of apoptosis in response to the disruption of mitosis provides surveillance against chromosome instability. Here, we show that proteolytic destruction of the key regulator Mcl‐1 during an extended mitosis requires the anaphase‐promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) and is independent of another ubiquitin E3 ligase, SCFFbw7. Using live‐cell imaging, we show that the loss of Mcl‐1 during mitosis is dependent on a D box motif found in other APC/C substrates, while an isoleucine‐arginine (IR) C‐terminal tail regulates the manner in which Mcl‐1 engages with the APC/C, converting Mcl‐1 from a Cdc20‐dependent and checkpoint‐controlled substrate to one that is degraded independently of checkpoint strength. This mechanism ensures a relatively slow but steady rate of Mcl‐1 degradation during mitosis and avoids its catastrophic destruction when the mitotic checkpoint is satisfied, providing an apoptotic timer that can distinguish a prolonged mitotic delay from normal mitosis. Importantly, we also show that inhibition of Cdc20 promotes mitotic cell death more effectively than loss of APC/C activity through differential effects on Mcl‐1 degradation, providing an improved strategy to kill cancer cells.  相似文献   

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This study investigated the anticancer effects of geraniin on ovarian cancer cells and the signaling pathways involved. Ovarian cancer cells were treated with different concentrations of geraniin for 48 h and examined for viability, apoptosis, mitochondrial membrane depolarization, and gene expression. Xenograft tumor studies were performed to determine the anticancer activity of geraniin in vivo. Geraniin significantly decreased cancer cell viability in a concentration‐dependent fashion. Geraniin significantly triggered apoptosis, which was accompanied by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and increased cytochrome c release and caspsase‐3 activity. Mechanistically, geraniin significantly downregulated Mcl‐1 and impaired NF‐κB p65 binding to the mcl‐1 promoter. Overexpression of Mcl‐1 significantly reversed geraniin‐induced apoptosis in OVCAR3 cells. In addition, geraniin retarded ovarian cancer growth and reduced expression of phospho‐p65 and Mcl‐1. Collectively, geraniin elicits growth suppression in ovarian cancer through inhibition of NF‐κB and Mcl‐1 and may provide therapeutic benefits for this malignancy.  相似文献   

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Tumor necrosis factor‐related apoptosis‐inducing ligand (TRAIL) can induce apoptosis in cancer cells while sparing normal cells, thereby leading to the development of TRAIL receptor agonists for cancer treatment. However, these agonist‐based therapeutics exhibit little clinical benefits due to the lack of biomarkers to predict whether patients are responsive to the treatment, as well as determine the resistance of cancer cells to TRAIL‐based agonists. Our previous study has demonstrated that ISG12a enhances TRAIL‐induced apoptosis and might serve as a biomarker to predict the TRAIL response. The downstream mechanism by which ISG12a augments TRAIL‐induced apoptosis remains to be elucidated. In this study, we found that ISG12a was localized in the mitochondria and nucleus and augmented TRAIL‐induced apoptosis through intrinsic apoptotic pathway. In addition, ISG12a interacted with NR4A1 and promoted its nuclear‐to‐cytoplasm translocation. Upon translocate to cytoplasm, NR4A1 targeted mitochondria and induced Bcl2 conformational change, thereby exposing its BH3 domain. Moreover, TRAIL treatment can induce NR4A1 expression through the activation of NF‐κB in TRAIL‐resistant Huh7 hepatoma cells. Knockdown of NR4A1 could overcome TRAIL resistance. However, in TRAIL‐sensitive LH86 liver cancer cells, TRAIL activated the Jun N‐terminal kinases signalling pathway. Overall, these results showed that both ISG12a and its interaction partner NR4A1 are involved in TRAIL‐mediated apoptosis in hepatoma cells.  相似文献   

6.
The capacity of tumour necrosis factor‐related apoptosis‐inducing ligand (TRAIL) to trigger apoptosis preferentially in cancer cells, although sparing normal cells, has motivated clinical development of TRAIL receptor agonists as anti‐cancer therapeutics. The molecular mechanisms responsible for the differential TRAIL sensitivity of normal and cancer cells are, however, poorly understood. Here, we show a novel signalling pathway that activates cytoprotective autophagy in untransformed human epithelial cells treated with TRAIL. TRAIL‐induced autophagy is mediated by the AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) that inhibits mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1, a potent inhibitor of autophagy. Interestingly, the TRAIL‐induced AMPK activation is refractory to the depletion of the two known AMPK‐activating kinases, LKB1 and Ca(2+)/calmodulin‐dependent kinase kinase‐β, but depends on transforming growth factor‐β‐activating kinase 1 (TAK1) and TAK1‐binding subunit 2. As TAK1 and AMPK are ubiquitously expressed kinases activated by numerous cytokines and developmental cues, these data are most likely to have broad implications for our understanding of cellular control of energy homoeostasis as well as the resistance of untransformed cells against TRAIL‐induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

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This report describes that protein kinase C delta (PKCδ) overexpression prevents TRAIL‐induced apoptosis in breast tumor cells; however, the regulatory mechanism(s) involved in this phenomenon is(are) incompletely understood. In this study, we have shown that TRAIL‐induced apoptosis was significantly inhibited in PKCδ overexpressing MCF‐7 (MCF7/PKCδ) cells. Our data reveal that PKCδ inhibits caspase‐8 activation, a first step in TRAIL‐induced apoptosis, thus preventing TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. Inhibition of PKCδ using rottlerin or PKCδ siRNA reverses the inhibitory effect of PKCδ on caspase‐8 activation leading to TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. To determine if caspase‐3‐induced PKCδ cleavage reverses its inhibition on caspase‐8, we developed stable cell lines that either expresses wild‐type PKCδ (MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδ) or caspase‐3 cleavage‐resistant PKCδ mutant (MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδ mut) utilizing MCF‐7 cells expressing caspase‐3. Cells that overexpress caspase‐3 cleavage‐resistant PKCδ mutant (MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδmut) significantly inhibited TRAIL‐induced apoptosis when compared to wild‐type PKCδ (MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδ) expressing cells. In MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδmut cells, TRAIL‐induced caspase‐8 activation was blocked leading to inhibition of apoptosis when compared to wild‐type PKCδ (MCF‐7/cas‐3/PKCδ) expressing cells. Together, these results strongly suggest that overexpression of PKCδ inhibits caspase‐8 activation leading to inhibition of TRAIL‐induced apoptosis and its inhibition by rottlerin, siRNA, or cleavage by caspase‐3 sensitizes cells to TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. Clinically, PKCδ overexpressing tumors can be treated with a combination of PKCδ inhibitor(s) and TRAIL as a new treatment strategy. J. Cell. Biochem. 111: 979–987, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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Ascertaining the upstream regulatory mechanisms of hyperthermia‐induced apoptosis is important to understand the role of hyperthermia in combined modality cancer therapy. Accordingly, we investigated whether (i) hyperthermia‐induced apoptosis is mediated through the nitric oxide (NO) signaling pathway and (ii) inhibition of post‐translational modification of IκBα and down regulation of NFκB‐DNA binding activity is an intermediate step in NO‐dependent apoptosis in MCF‐7 breast cancer cells. For hyperthermia treatment, the cells were exposed to 43°C. Intracellular NO levels measured by the fluorescent intensity of DAF‐2A and iNOS expression by immunobloting revealed an increased level of iNOS dependent NO production after 43°C. Apoptosis measured by Annexin V expression and cell survival by clonogenic assay showed a 20% increase in apoptosis after 43°C treatments. EMSA analysis showed a dose‐dependent inhibition of NFκB‐DNA binding activity. The hyperthermia‐mediated inhibition of NFκB was persistent even after 48 h. Inhibition of NO by L ‐NAME rescued the NFκB‐DNA binding activity and inhibits heat‐induced apoptosis. Similarly, over‐expression of NFκB by transient transfection inhibits heat‐induced apoptosis. These results demonstrate that apoptosis upon hyperthermia exposure of MCF‐7 cells is regulated by NO‐mediated suppression of NFκB. J. Cell. Biochem. 106: 999–1009, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Fragile histidine triad (FHIT) is a tumor suppressor gene whose allelic loss is associated to a number of human cancers. FHIT protein acts as a diadenosine oligophosphate hydrolase, but its tumor suppressive activity appears as independent from its enzymatic activity. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)‐related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL) can induce apoptosis in the FHIT‐negative non‐small lung cancer cell line Calu‐1. We generated four FHIT‐inducible Calu‐1 cell clones and demonstrated that FHIT expression was able to protect cells from TRAIL‐induced apoptosis, without affecting TRAIL‐receptors surface expression. FHIT‐specific small interference RNA transfection of SV40‐immortalized normal bronchial BEAS cells that show levels of FHIT protein comparable to those of normal bronchial cells, resulted in a significant increase of TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. Of note, suramin‐mediated inhibition of FHIT enzymatic activity also enhanced TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. We conclude that FHIT expression in lung cancer cells is protective from TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. Our data suggest that FHIT exerts this protective effect downstream TRAIL‐receptors and likely requires its dinucleoside‐triphosphate hydrolase activity. As TRAIL represents in the near future a good candidate for death ligands‐based anticancer therapy, its potential therapeutic use should be envisaged as preliminary to molecular genetics interventions or drug‐induced epigenetic modulations aimed to restoring FHIT gene expression levels in non‐small cells lung tumors. J. Cell. Physiol. 220: 492–498, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Lestaurtinib, also called CEP‐701, is an inhibitor of tyrosine kinase, causes haematological remission in patients with AML possessing FLT3‐ITD (FLT3 gene) internal tandem duplication and strongly inhibits tyrosine kinase FLT3. Treatment with lestaurtinib modulates various signalling pathways and leads to cell growth arrest and programmed cell death in several tumour types. However, the effect of lestaurtinib on glioma remains unclear. In this study, we examined lestaurtinib and TRAIL interactions in glioma cells and observed their synergistic activity on glioma cell apoptosis. While U87 and U251 cells showed resistance to TRAIL single treatment, they were sensitized to apoptosis induced by TRAIL in the presence of lestaurtinib because of increased death receptor 5 (DR5) levels through CHOP‐dependent manner. We also demonstrated using a xenograft model of mouse that the tumour growth was absolutely suppressed because of the combined treatment compared to TRAIL or lestaurtinib treatment carried out singly. Our findings reveal a potential new strategy to improve antitumour activity induced by TRAIL in glioma cells using lestaurtinib through a mechanism dependent on CHOP.  相似文献   

13.
The prostate‐apoptosis‐response‐gene‐4 (Par‐4) is up‐regulated in prostate cells undergoing programmed cell death. Furthermore, Par‐4 protein has been shown to function as an effector of cell death in response to various apoptotic stimuli that trigger mitochondria and membrane receptor‐mediated cell death pathways. In this study, we investigated how Par‐4 modulates TRAIL‐mediated apoptosis in TRAIL‐resistant Caki cells. Par‐4 overexpressing cells were strikingly sensitive to apoptosis induced by TRAIL compared with control cells. Par‐4 overexpressing Caki cells treated with TRAIL showed an increased activation of the initiator caspase‐8 and the effector caspase‐3, together with an enforced cleavage of XIAP and c‐FLIP. TRAIL‐induced reduction of XIAP and c‐FLIP protein levels in Par‐4 overexpressing cells was prevented by z‐VAD pretreatment. In addition, the surface DR5 protein level was increased in TRAIL‐treated Par‐4 overexpressing cells. Interestingly, even though a deletion of leucine zipper domain in Par‐4 recovered Bcl‐2 level to basal level induced by wild type Par‐4, it partly decreased sensitivity to TRAIL in Caki cells. In addition, exposure of Caki/Par‐4 cells to TRAIL led to reduction of phosphorylated Akt levels, but deletion of leucine zipper domain of Par‐4 did not affect these phosphorylated Akt levels. In conclusion, we here provide evidence that ectopic expression of Par‐4 sensitizes Caki cells to TRAIL via modulation of multiple targets, including DR5, Bcl‐2, Akt, and NF‐κB. J. Cell. Biochem. 109: 885–895, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Bioreactor stresses, including nutrient deprivation, shear stress, and byproduct accumulation can cause apoptosis, leading to lower recombinant protein yields and increased costs in downstream processing. Although cell engineering strategies utilizing the overexpression of antiapoptotic Bcl‐2 family proteins such as Bcl‐2 and Bcl‐xL potently inhibit apoptosis, no studies have examined the use of the Bcl‐2 family protein, Mcl‐1, in commercial mammalian cell culture processes. Here, we overexpress both the wild type Mcl‐1 protein and a Mcl‐1 mutant protein that is not degraded by the proteasome in a serum‐free Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell line producing a therapeutic antibody. The expression of Mcl‐1 led to increased viabilities in fed‐batch culture, with cell lines expressing the Mcl‐1 mutant maintaining ~90% viability after 14 days when compared with 65% for control cells. In addition to enhanced culture viability, Mcl‐1‐expressing cell lines were isolated that consistently showed increases in antibody production of 20–35% when compared with control cultures. The quality of the antibody product was not affected in the Mcl‐1‐expressing cell lines, and Mcl‐1‐expressing cells exhibited 3‐fold lower caspase‐3 activation when compared with the control cell lines. Altogether, the expression of Mcl‐1 represents a promising alternative cell engineering strategy to delay apoptosis and increase recombinant protein production in CHO cells. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

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In this study, we explored the cytotoxic effects of arctigenin, a natural lignan compound, on human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells and check the involvement of phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase (PI3‐K)/Akt signaling. HCC cells were treated with different concentrations of arctigenin and cell viability and apoptosis were assessed. Manipulating Akt signaling was used to determine its role in the action of arctigenin. Arctigenin significantly inhibited the viability of HCC cells in a concentration‐dependent manner. Arctigenin induced apoptosis and activation of caspase‐9 and ‐3. Overexpression of a constitutively active Akt mutant blocked arctigenin‐induced apoptosis. Combinational treatment with arctigenin and the PI3‐K inhibitor LY294002 significantly enhanced apoptosis. Arctigenin reduced the expression of Bcl‐xL, Mcl‐1, and survivin and the phosphorylation of mTOR and S6K, which were significantly reversed by overexpression of constitutively active Akt. This is the first report about the anticancer activity of arctigenin in HCC cells, which is mediated by inactivation of PI3‐K/Akt signaling.  相似文献   

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Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common joint disease characterized by progressive cartilage degradation, in which elevated chondrocyte apoptosis and catabolic activity play an important role. MicroRNA‐155 (miR‐155) has recently been shown to regulate apoptosis and catabolic activity in some pathological circumstances, yet, whether and how miR‐155 is associated with OA pathology remain unexplored. We report here that miR‐155 level is significantly up‐regulated in human OA cartilage biopsies and also in primary chondrocytes stimulated by interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β), a pivotal pro‐catabolic factor promoting cartilage degradation. Moreover, miR‐155 inhibition attenuates and its overexpression promotes IL‐1β‐induced apoptosis and catabolic activity in chondrocytes in vitro. We also demonstrate that the PIK3R1 (p85α regulatory subunit of phosphoinositide 3‐kinase (PI3K)) is a target of miR‐155 in chondrocytes, and more importantly, PIK3R1 restoration abrogates miR‐155 effects on chondrocyte apoptosis and catabolic activity. Mechanistically, PIK3R1 positively regulates the transduction of PI3K/Akt pathway, and a specific Akt inhibitor reverses miR‐155 effects on promoting chondrocyte apoptosis and catabolic activity, phenocopying the results obtained via PIK3R1 knockdown, hence establishing that miR‐155 promotes chondrocyte apoptosis and catabolic activity through targeting PIK3R1‐mediated PI3K/Akt pathway activation. Altogether, our study discovers novel roles and mechanisms of miR‐155 in regulating chondrocyte apoptosis and catabolic activity, providing an implication for therapeutically intervening cartilage degradation and OA progression.  相似文献   

20.
The Bcl‐2 family modulates sensitivity to chemotherapy in many cancers, including melanoma, in which the RAS/BRAF/MEK/ERK pathway is constitutively activated. Mcl‐1, a major anti‐apoptotic protein in the Bcl‐2 family, is extensively expressed in melanoma and contributes to melanoma's well‐documented chemoresistance. Here, we provide the first evidence that Mcl‐1 phosphorylation at T163 by ERK1/2 and JNK is associated with the resistance of melanoma cell lines to the existing BH3 mimetics gossypol, S1 and ABT‐737, and a novel anti‐apoptotic mechanism of phosphorylated Mcl‐1 (pMcl‐1) is revealed. pMcl‐1 antagonized the known BH3 mimetics by sequestering pro‐apoptotic proteins that were released from Bcl‐2/Mcl‐1. Furthermore, an anthraquinone BH3 mimetic, compound 6, was identified to be the first small molecule to that induces endogenous apoptosis in melanoma cells by directly binding Bcl‐2, Mcl‐1, and pMcl‐1 and disrupting the heterodimers of these proteins. Although compound 6 induced upregulation of the pro‐apoptotic protein Noxa, its apoptotic induction was independent of Noxa. These data reveal the promising therapeutic potential of targeting pMcl‐1 to treat melanoma. Compound 6 is therefore a potent drug that targets pMcl‐1 in melanoma.  相似文献   

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