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1.
Shiga toxins (Stxs) produced by Stx‐producing Escherichia coli are the primarily virulence factors of hemolytic uremic syndrome and central nervous system (CNS) impairment. Although the precise mechanisms of toxin dissemination remain unclear, Stxs bind to extracellular vesicles (EVs). Exosomes, a subset of EVs, may play a key role in Stx‐mediated renal injury. To test this hypothesis, we isolated exosomes from monocyte‐derived macrophages in the presence of Stx2a or Stx2 toxoids. Macrophage‐like differentiated THP‐1 cells treated with Stxs secreted Stx‐associated exosomes (Stx‐Exo) of 90–130 nm in diameter, which induced cytotoxicity in recipient cells in a toxin receptor globotriaosylceramide (Gb3)‐dependent manner. Stx2‐Exo engulfed by Gb3‐positive cells were translocated to the endoplasmic reticulum in the human proximal tubule epithelial cell line HK‐2. Stx2‐Exo contained pro‐inflammatory cytokine mRNAs and proteins and induced more severe inflammation than purified Stx2a accompanied by greater death of target cells such as human renal or retinal pigment epithelial cells. Blockade of exosome biogenesis using the pharmacological inhibitor GW4869 reduced Stx2‐Exo‐mediated human renal cell death. Stx2‐Exo isolated from human primary monocyte–derived macrophages activated caspase 3/7 and resulted in significant cell death in primary human renal cortical epithelial cells. Based on these results, we speculate that Stx‐containing exosomes derived from macrophages may exacerbate cytotoxicity and inflammation and trigger cell death in toxin‐sensitive cells. Therapeutic interventions targeting Stx‐containing exosomes may prevent or ameliorate Stx‐mediated acute vascular dysfunction.  相似文献   

2.
Chu CY  Rana TM 《RNA (New York, N.Y.)》2008,14(9):1714-1719
RNA interference (RNAi) is a gene-silencing mechanism by which a ribonucleoprotein complex, the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and a double-stranded (ds) short-interfering RNA (siRNA), targets a complementary mRNA for site-specific cleavage and subsequent degradation. While longer dsRNA are endogenously processed into 21- to 24-nucleotide (nt) siRNAs or miRNAs to induce gene silencing, RNAi studies in human cells typically use synthetic 19- to 20-nt siRNA duplexes with 2-nt overhangs at the 3′-end of both strands. Here, we report that systematic synthesis and analysis of siRNAs with deletions at the passenger and/or guide strand revealed a short RNAi trigger, 16-nt siRNA, which induces potent RNAi in human cells. Our results indicate that the minimal requirement for dsRNA to trigger RNAi is an ~42 Å A-form helix with ~1.5 helical turns. The 16-nt siRNA more effectively knocked down mRNA and protein levels than 19-nt siRNA when targeting the endogenous CDK9 gene, suggesting that 16-nt siRNA is a more potent RNAi trigger. In vitro kinetic analysis of RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) programmed in HeLa cells indicates that 16-nt siRNA has a higher RISC-loading capacity than 19-nt siRNA. These results suggest that RISC assembly and activation during RNAi does not necessarily require a 19-nt duplex siRNA and that 16-nt duplexes can be designed as more potent triggers to induce RNAi.  相似文献   

3.
Cell free DNA is often regarded as a source of genetic cancer biomarkers, but the related mechanisms of DNA release, composition and biological activity remain unclear. Here we show that rat epithelial cell transformation by the human H-ras oncogene leads to an increase in production of small, exosomal-like extracellular vesicles by viable cancer cells. These EVs contain chromatin-associated double-stranded DNA fragments covering the entire host genome, including full-length H-ras. Oncogenic N-ras and SV40LT sequences were also found in EVs emitted from spontaneous mouse brain tumor cells. Disruption of acidic sphingomyelinase and the p53/Rb pathway did not block emission of EV-related oncogenic DNA. Exposure of non-transformed RAT-1 cells to EVs containing mutant H-ras DNA led to the uptake and retention of this material for an extended (30 days) but transient period of time, and stimulated cell proliferation. Thus, our study suggests that H-ras-mediated transformation stimulates vesicular emission of this histone-bound oncogene, which may interact with non-transformed cells.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Cervical cancer is the most common gynaecological malignancy, with a high incidence rate and mortality rate in middle-aged women. Human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBMSCs) have been implicated in the initiation and subsequent development of cancer, along with the involvement of extracellular vesicles (EVs) mediating intracellular communication by delivering microRNAs (miRNAs or miRs). This study is aimed at investigating the physiological mechanisms by which EVs-encapsulated miR-144-3p derived from hBMSCs might mediate the progression of cervical cancer. The expression profiles of centrosomal protein, 55 Kd (CEP55) and miR-144-3p in cervical cancer cell lines and tissues, were quantified by RT-qPCR and Western blot analysis. The binding affinity between miR-144-3p and CEP55 was identified using in silico analysis and luciferase activity determination. Cervical cancer cells were co-cultured with EVs derived from hBMSCs that were treated with either miR-144-3p mimic or miR-144-3p inhibitor. Cervical cancer cell proliferation, invasion, migration and apoptosis were detected in vitro. The effects of hBMSCs-miR-144-3p on tumour growth were also investigated in vivo. miR-144-3p was down-regulated, whereas CEP55 was up-regulated in cervical cancer cell lines and tissues. CEP55 was targeted by miR-144-3p, which suppressed cervical cancer cell proliferation, invasion and migration and promoted apoptosis via CEP55. Furthermore, similar results were obtained by hBMSCs-derived EVs carrying miR-144-3p. In vivo assays confirmed the tumour-suppressive effects of miR-144-3p in hBMSCs-derived EVs on cervical cancer. Collectively, hBMSCs-derived EVs-loaded miR-144-3p impedes the development and progression of cervical cancer through target inhibition of CEP55, therefore providing us with a potential therapeutic target for treating cervical cancer.  相似文献   

6.
Cancer-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as important mediators of tumour-host interactions, and they have been shown to exert various functional effects in immune cells. In most of the studies on human immune cells, EVs have been isolated from cancer cell culture medium or patients' body fluids and added to the immune cell cultures. In such a setting, the physiological relevance of the chosen EV concentration is unknown and the EV isolation method and the timing of EV administration may bias the results. In the current study we aimed to develop an experimental cell culture model to study EV-mediated effects in human T and B cells at conditions mimicking the tumour microenvironment. We constructed a human prostate cancer cell line PC3 producing GFP-tagged EVs (PC3-CD63-GFP cells) and developed a 3D heterotypic spheroid model composed of PC3-CD63-GFP cells and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The transfer of GFP-tagged EVs from PC3-CD63-GFP cells to the lymphocytes was analysed by flow cytometry and fluorescence imaging. The endocytic pathway was investigated using three endocytosis inhibitors. Our results showed that GFP-tagged EVs interacted with a large fraction of B cells, however, the majority of EVs were not internalised by B cells but rather remained bound at the cell surface. T cell subsets differed in their ability to interact with the EVs - 15.7–24.1% of the total CD3+ T cell population interacted with GFP-tagged EVs, while only 0.3–5.8% of CD8+ T were GFP positive. Furthermore, a fraction of EVs were internalised in CD3+ T cells via macropinocytosis. Taken together, the heterotypic PC3-CD63-GFP and PBMC spheroid model provides the opportunity to study the interactions and functional effects of cancer-derived EVs in human immune cells at conditions mimicking the tumour microenvironment.  相似文献   

7.
Bone is the most common site of breast cancer metastasis. Although it is widely accepted that the microenvironment influences cancer cell behavior, little is known about breast cancer cell properties and behaviors within the native microenvironment of human bone tissue.We have developed approaches to track, quantify and modulate human breast cancer cells within the microenvironment of cultured human bone tissue fragments isolated from discarded femoral heads following total hip replacement surgeries. Using breast cancer cells engineered for luciferase and enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression, we are able to reproducibly quantitate migration and proliferation patterns using bioluminescence imaging (BLI), track cell interactions within the bone fragments using fluorescence microscopy, and evaluate breast cells after colonization with flow cytometry. The key advantages of this model include: 1) a native, architecturally intact tissue microenvironment that includes relevant human cell types, and 2) direct access to the microenvironment, which facilitates rapid quantitative and qualitative monitoring and perturbation of breast and bone cell properties, behaviors and interactions. A primary limitation, at present, is the finite viability of the tissue fragments, which confines the window of study to short-term culture. Applications of the model system include studying the basic biology of breast cancer and other bone-seeking malignancies within the metastatic niche, and developing therapeutic strategies to effectively target breast cancer cells in bone tissues.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Mitotic catastrophe is an oncosuppressive mechanism that senses mitotic failure leading to cell death or senescence. As such, it protects against aneuploidy and genetic instability, and its induction in cancer cells by exogenous agents is currently seen as a promising therapeutic end point. Apoptin, a small protein from Chicken Anemia Virus (CAV), is known for its ability to selectively induce cell death in human tumor cells. Here, we show that apoptin triggers p53-independent abnormal spindle formation in osteosarcoma cells. Approximately 50% of apoptin-positive cells displayed non-bipolar spindles, a 10-fold increase as compared to control cells. Besides, tumor cells expressing apoptin are greatly limited in their progress through anaphase and telophase, and a significant drop in mitotic cells past the meta-to-anaphase transition is observed. Time-lapse microscopy showed that mitotic osteosarcoma cells expressing apoptin displayed aberrant mitotic figures and/or had a prolonged cycling time during mitosis. Importantly, all dividing cells expressing apoptin eventually underwent cell death either during mitosis or during the following interphase. We infer that apoptin can efficiently trigger cell death in dividing human tumor cells through induction of mitotic catastrophe. However, the killing activity of apoptin is not only confined to dividing cells, as the CAV-derived protein is also able to trigger caspase-3 activation and apoptosis in non-mitotic cancer cells.  相似文献   

10.
The p53 tumor suppressor: Critical regulator of life & death in cancer   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
p53 is the most commonly mutated or deleted known gene in human cancer. The consequences of its disruption are profound, either in the germlines of patients with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome, or in mice with targeted gene knockouts. Abundant evidence suggests that p53 exerts regulation of cell cycle progression as well as apoptotic cell death, both in response to identical environmental or metabolic stressors. The specific decision of cell cycle arrest vs. death may underlie p53's differential ability to trigger death in cancer cells and arrest with repair in non-cancer cells, thus producing a therapeutic index pertinent to cancer therapy. Indeed, p53 status is likely to correlate with prognosis in many human cancers and in multiple animal tumor models. The mechanistic basis for p53's functions are still emerging, and will hopefully yield new therapeutic strategies applicable to treatment of the many poor-prognosis, p53-deficient human malignancies.  相似文献   

11.
BackgroundMelanoma cells release extracellular vesicles (EVs) subpopulations which differ in size, phenotype and molecular content. Melanoma derived EVs play a role in the development and progression of cancer by delivering surface receptors and bioactive (proteins, lipids, nucleic acids) or signaling molecules to target cells.MethodsWe applied Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) to compare infrared spectra of absorption for different subpopulations of EVs originating from normal human melanocytes, primary cutaneous melanoma (WM115) and metastatic cutaneous melanoma (WM266-4).ResultsFTIR results showed that exosome and ectosome populations differ in content of protein and lipid components. We obtained higher lipid to protein ratio for ectosomes in comparison with exosomes what confirms that exosomes are very densely packed with protein cargo. We identified the lowest value of saturated fatty acids/unsaturated fatty acids parameter in the metastatic WM266-4 cell line and ectosomes derived from WM266-4 cell line in comparison with normal melanocytes and the primary WM115 cell line. We identified the alterations in the content of secondary structures of proteins present in EV subpopulations originating from melanocytes and melanoma cells in different malignancy.ConclusionsObtained results revealed differences in the molecular composition of melanoma derived EVs subtypes, including protein secondary structure, and showed progressive structural changes during cancer development.  相似文献   

12.
Caspase-dependent apoptosis is a controlled type of cell death characterized by oligonucleosomal DNA breakdown and major nuclear morphological alterations. Other kinds of cell death do not share these highly distinctive traits because caspase-activated DNase (DFF40/CAD) remains inactive. Here, we report that human glioblastoma multiforme-derived LN-18 cells do not hydrolyze DNA into oligonucleosomal fragments after apoptotic insult. Furthermore, their chromatin remains packaged into a single mass, with no signs of nuclear fragmentation. However, ultrastructural analysis reveals that nuclear disassembly occurs, although compacted chromatin does not localize into apoptotic nuclear bodies. Caspases become properly activated, and ICAD, the inhibitor of DFF40/CAD, is correctly processed. Using cell-free in vitro assays, we show that chromatin from isolated nuclei of LN-18 cells is suitable for hydrolysis into oligonuclesomal fragments by staurosporine-pretreated SH-SY5Y cytoplasms. However, staurosporine-pretreated LN-18 cytoplasms do not induce DNA laddering in isolated nuclei from either LN-18 or SH-SY5Y cells because LN-18 cells express lower amounts of DFF40/CAD. DFF40/CAD overexpression makes LN-18 cells fully competent to degrade their DNA into oligonucleosome-sized fragments, and yet they remain unable to arrange their chromatin into nuclear clumps after apoptotic insult. Indeed, isolated nuclei from LN-18 cells were resistant to undergoing apoptotic nuclear morphology in vitro. The use of LN-18 cells has uncovered a previously unsuspected cellular model, whereby a caspase-dependent chromatin package is DFF40/CAD-independent, and DFF40/CAD-mediated double-strand DNA fragmentation does not warrant the distribution of the chromatin into apoptotic nuclear bodies. The studies highlight a not-yet reported DFF40/CAD-independent mechanism driving conformational nuclear changes during caspase-dependent cell death.  相似文献   

13.
Activated double-stranded RNA (dsRNA-dependent protein kinase PKR is a potent growth inhibitory protein that is primarily activated in virally infected cells, inducing cell death. Here we investigate whether selective activation of PKR can be used to kill cancer cells that express mutated genes containing deletions or chromosomal translocations. We show that antisense (AS) RNA complementary to fragments flanking the deletion or translocation can produce a dsRNA molecule of sufficient length to activate PKR and induce cell death following hybridization with mutated but not wild-type mRNA. Using the U87MG Delta EGFR cell line, which expresses a truncated form of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), Delta(2-7) EGFR, we found that expression of a 39-nucleotide (nt) AS RNA complementary to the unique exon 1 to 8 junction caused selective death of cells harboring the truncated EGFR both in vitro and in vivo but did not affect cells expressing wild-type EGFR. A lentiviral vector expressing the 39-nt AS sequence strongly inhibited glioblastoma growth in mouse brain when injected after tumor cell implantation. This PKR-mediated killing strategy may be useful in treating many cancers that express a unique RNA species.  相似文献   

14.
Geranylated 4-phenylcoumarins, DMDP-1 & -2 isolated from Mesua elegans were investigated for anticancer potential against human prostate cancer cells. Treatment with DMDP-1 & -2 resulted in cell death in a time and dose dependent manner in an MTT assay on all cancer cell lines tested with the exception of lung adenocarcinoma cells. DMDP-1 showed highest cytotoxic efficacy in PC-3 cells while DMDP-2 was most potent in DU 145 cells. Flow cytometry indicated that both coumarins were successful to induce programmed cell death after 24 h treatment. Elucidation on the mode-of-action via protein arrays and western blotting demonstrated death induced without any significant expressions of caspases, Bcl-2 family proteins and cleaved PARP, thus suggesting the involvement of caspase-independent pathways. In identifying autophagy, analysis of GFP-LC3 showed increased punctate in PC-3 cells pre-treated with CQ and treated with DMDP-1. In these cells decreased expression of autophagosome protein, p62 and cathepsin B further confirmed autophagy. In contrary, the DU 145 cells pre-treated with CQ and treated with DMDP-2 has reduced GFP-LC3 punctate although the number of cells with obvious GFP-LC3 puncta was significantly increased in the inhibitor-treated cells. The increase level of p62 suggested leakage of cathepsin B into the cytosol to trigger potential downstream death mediators. This correlated with increased expression of cathepsin B and reduced expression after treatment with its inhibitor, CA074. Also auto-degradation of calpain-2 upon treatment with DMDP-1 &-2 and its inhibitor alone, calpeptin compared with the combination treatment, further confirmed involvement of calpain-2 in PC-3 and DU 145 cells. Treatment with DMDP-1 & -2 also showed up-regulation of total and phosphorylated p53 levels in a time dependent manner. Hence, DMDP-1 & -2 showed ability to activate multiple death pathways involving autophagy, lysosomal and endoplasmic reticulum death proteins which could potentially be manipulated to develop anti-cancer therapy in apoptosis resistant cells.  相似文献   

15.
Exosomes and other extracellular vesicles (EVs) participate in cell–cell communication. Herein, we isolated EVs from human plasma and demonstrated that these EVs activate cell signaling and promote neurite outgrowth in PC-12 cells. Analysis of human plasma EVs purified by sequential ultracentrifugation using tandem mass spectrometry indicated the presence of multiple plasma proteins, including α2-macroglobulin, which is reported to regulate PC-12 cell physiology. We therefore further purified EVs by molecular exclusion or phosphatidylserine affinity chromatography, which reduced plasma protein contamination. EVs subjected to these additional purification methods exhibited unchanged activity in PC-12 cells, even though α2-macroglobulin was reduced to undetectable levels. Nonpathogenic cellular prion protein (PrPC) was carried by human plasma EVs and essential for the effects of EVs on PC-12 cells, as EV-induced cell signaling and neurite outgrowth were blocked by the PrPC-specific antibody, POM2. In addition, inhibitors of the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor (NMDA-R) and low-density lipoprotein receptor–related protein-1 (LRP1) blocked the effects of plasma EVs on PC-12 cells, as did silencing of Lrp1 or the gene encoding the GluN1 NMDA-R subunit (Grin1). These results implicate the NMDA-R–LRP1 complex as the receptor system responsible for mediating the effects of EV-associated PrPC. Finally, EVs harvested from rat astrocytes carried PrPC and replicated the effects of human plasma EVs on PC-12 cell signaling. We conclude that interaction of EV-associated PrPC with the NMDA-R–LRP1 complex in target cells represents a novel mechanism by which EVs may participate in intercellular communication in the nervous system.  相似文献   

16.
Enteroviruses (EVs) are the most common human viral pathogens. They cause a variety of pathologies, including myocarditis and meningoencephalopathies, and have been linked to the onset of type I diabetes. These pathologies result from the death of cells in the myocardium, central nervous system, and pancreas, respectively. Understanding the role of EVs in inducing cell death is crucial to understanding the etiologies of these diverse pathologies. EVs both induce and delay host cell death, and their exquisite control of this balance is crucial for their success as human viral pathogens. Thus, EVs are tightly involved with cell death signaling pathways and interact with host cell signaling at multiple points. Here, we review the literature detailing the mechanisms of EV-induced cell death. We discuss the mechanisms by which EVs induce cell death, the signaling pathways involved in these pathways, and the strategies by which EVs antagonize cell death pathways. We also discuss the role of cell death in both the resulting pathology in the host and in the facilitation of viral spread.  相似文献   

17.
DNA amplification is a molecular process that increases the copy number of a chromosomal tract and often causes elevated expression of the amplified gene(s). Although gene amplification is frequently observed in cancer and other degenerative disorders, the molecular mechanisms involved in the process of DNA copy number increase remain largely unknown. We hypothesized that small DNA fragments could be the trigger of DNA amplification events. Following our findings that small fragments of DNA in the form of DNA oligonucleotides can be highly recombinogenic, we have developed a system in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to capture events of chromosomal DNA amplification initiated by small DNA fragments. Here we demonstrate that small DNAs can amplify a chromosomal region, generating either tandem duplications or acentric extrachromosomal DNA circles. Small fragment-driven DNA amplification (SFDA) occurs with a frequency that increases with the length of homology between the small DNAs and the target chromosomal regions. SFDA events are triggered even by small single-stranded molecules with as little as 20-nt homology with the genomic target. A double-strand break (DSB) external to the chromosomal amplicon region stimulates the amplification event up to a factor of 20 and favors formation of extrachromosomal circles. SFDA is dependent on Rad52 and Rad59, partially dependent on Rad1, Rad10, and Pol32, and independent of Rad51, suggesting a single-strand annealing mechanism. Our results reveal a novel molecular model for gene amplification, in which small DNA fragments drive DNA amplification and define the boundaries of the amplicon region. As DNA fragments are frequently found both inside cells and in the extracellular environment, such as the serum of patients with cancer or other degenerative disorders, we propose that SFDA may be a common mechanism for DNA amplification in cancer cells, as well as a more general cause of DNA copy number variation in nature.  相似文献   

18.
Pancreatic cancer, the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States, is resistant to current chemotherapies. Therefore, identification of different pathways of cell death is important to develop novel therapeutics. Our previous study has shown that triptolide, a diterpene triepoxide, inhibits the growth of pancreatic cancer cells in vitro and prevents tumor growth in vivo. However, the mechanism by which triptolide kills pancreatic cancer cells was not known, hence, this study aimed at elucidating it. Our study reveals that triptolide kills diverse types of pancreatic cancer cells by two different pathways; it induces caspase-dependent apoptotic death in some cell lines and death via a caspase-independent autophagic pathway in the other cell lines tested. Triptolide-induced autophagy requires autophagy-specific genes, atg5 or beclin 1 and its inhibition results in cell death via the apoptotic pathway, whereas inhibition of both autophagy and apoptosis rescues triptolide-mediated cell death. Our study shows for the first time that induction of autophagy by triptolide has a pro-death role in pancreatic cancer cells. Since triptolide kills diverse pancreatic cancer cells by different mechanisms, it makes an attractive chemotherapeutic agent for future use against a broad spectrum of pancreatic cancers.Key words: pancreatic cancer, triptolide, apoptosis, caspase-3Pancreatic adenocarcinoma is one of the most lethal human malignancies. It is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. The five-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer is estimated to be <5% due to its aggressive growth, metastasis and resistance to radiation and most systemic chemotherapies. Hence, efforts are ongoing to understand the pathobiology of pancreatic cancer to develop innovative and effective therapies against it. A promising candidate for future therapeutic use against pancreatic cancer is a diterpene triepoxide, triptolide. Our previous studies show that triptolide inhibits the growth of pancreatic cancer cells in vitro and prevents tumor growth in vivo. Since the mechanism by which triptolide kills pancreatic cancer cells was not known, we decided to elucidate it.The K-ras, p53, p16 and DPC4 genes are the most frequently altered genes in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. In this study we have used diverse pancreatic cancer cell lines, MiaPaCa-2, Capan-1, S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells, which have mutations in all the above-mentioned genes and BxPC-3 and Hs766T cells, which have mutations in the p53, p16 and DPC4 genes, but have a wild-type K-ras gene. The treatment of all the cell lines with triptolide results in a significant time- and dose-dependent decrease in cell viability, independent of cell cycle arrest. After treatment with triptolide, only MiaPaCa-2, Capan-1 and BxPC-3 cells show an increase in the apoptosis parameters: cytochrome c release from mitochondria into the cytosol, caspase-3 activation and phosphatidylserine externalization. In contrast to this, S2-013, S2-VP10 and Hs766T cells show an induction of autophagy: an increase in LC3-II levels (by immunoblotting and immufluorescence), increase in acridine orange-positive cells, inhibition of the PtdIns3K/Akt/mTOR pathway and induction of the ERK1/2 pathway. Also, none of the cell lines tested show necrosis as evidenced by the absence of the release of lactate dehydrogenase. These results indicate that triptolide induces apoptosis in MiaPaCa-2, Capan-1 and BxPC-3 cells, whereas it induces autophagy in S2-013, S2-VP10 and Hs766T cells.Since the role of autophagy in cancer was controversial we investigated whether triptolide-induced autophagy has a prosurvival or a pro-death role. As autophagy-associated cell death is independent of caspase-3, we tested the effect of triptolide on pancreatic cancer cells in the absence of caspase-3. Treatment of cells with triptolide post-caspase-3 knockdown shows a significant rescue of cell viability only in MiaPaCa-2, but not S2-013 or S2-VP10 cells. This indicates that in contrast to MiaPaCa-2, triptolide-mediated cell death in S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells is independent of caspase-3. Next, we tested the role of autophagy in triptolide-mediated cell death in pancreatic cancer cells. In spite of a knockdown of autophagy-specific genes (atg5 and beclin 1), treatment of S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells with triptolide show a significant decline in cell viability, which is comparable to the cells treated with triptolide in the presence of autophagy genes. Subsequently we show that death in the absence of autophagy-specific genes is due to the utilization of an alternate cell death pathway, apoptosis. Furthermore, in the absence of both autophagy-specific and apoptosis-specific genes, triptolide-mediated cell death is rescued in S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells. Thus, these results confirm that triptolide-induced autophagy has a pro-death role in S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells and that these cells do not have a defect in the apoptotic machinery; however, they respond to triptolide by activating the autophagic pathway instead of the apoptotic pathway. Our studies also reveal the presence of a crosstalk between the two cell death pathways, apoptosis and autophagy, in pancreatic cancer cells.In conclusion, our study shows for the first time that triptolide induces autophagy in pancreatic cancer cells. It sheds light on the fundamental question as to whether autophagy is protective or causes cell death, proving convincingly that induction of autophagy causes cell death of some pancreatic cancer cells. Although a basal level of autophagy is necessary to maintain cellular homeostasis, its prosurvival role can be switched into a cell death mechanism if the amplitude of autophagy increases above a threshold level which is incompatible with viability, as seen in S2-013, S2-VP10 and Hs766T cells after triptolide treatment. Furthermore, there exists a crosstalk between apoptosis and autophagy in S2-013 and S2-VP10 cells; either both pathways function independently to kill the cells, with autophagy being the preferred pathway or autophagy antagonizes apoptosis and hence apoptosis is seen only after inhibiting autophagy. Although there is no direct correlation between the selection of cell death pathway in response to triptolide and the genotype of the cell lines, the choice of autophagic cell death pathway could depend on the metastatic potential of the cells; S2-013, S2-VP10 and Hs766T cell lines being more metastatic than the others, which merits further investigation. In conclusion, the ability of triptolide to induce cell death in diverse pancreatic cancer cells by either mechanism makes it an attractive chemotherapeutic agent against a broad spectrum of pancreatic cancers.  相似文献   

19.
Death signaling provided by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) can induce death in cancer cells with little cytotoxicity to normal cells; this cell death has been thought to involve caspase-dependent apoptosis. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are also mediators that induce cell death, but their roles in TRAIL-induced apoptosis have not been elucidated fully. In the current study, we investigated ROS and caspases in human pancreatic cancer cells undergoing two different types of TRAIL-induced cell death, apoptosis and necroptosis. TRAIL treatment increased ROS in two TRAIL-sensitive pancreatic cancer cell lines, MiaPaCa-2 and BxPC-3, but ROS were involved in TRAIL-induced apoptosis only in MiaPaCa-2 cells. Unexpectedly, inhibition of ROS by either N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC), a peroxide inhibitor, or Tempol, a superoxide inhibitor, increased the annexin V-/propidium iodide (PI)+ early necrotic population in TRAIL-treated cells. Additionally, both necrostatin-1, an inhibitor of receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIP1), and siRNA-mediated knockdown of RIP3 decreased the annexin V-/PI+ early necrotic population after TRAIL treatment. Furthermore, an increase in early apoptosis was induced in TRAIL-treated cancer cells under inhibition of either caspase-2 or -9. Caspase-2 worked upstream of caspase-9, and no crosstalk was observed between ROS and caspase-2/-9 in TRAIL-treated cells. Together, these results indicate that ROS contribute to TRAIL-induced apoptosis in MiaPaCa-2 cells, and that ROS play an inhibitory role in TRAIL-induced necroptosis of MiaPaCa-2 and BxPC-3 cells, with caspase-2 and -9 playing regulatory roles in this process.  相似文献   

20.
Adding NAD to murine T lymphocytes inhibits their functions and induces annexin V binding. This report shows that NAD induces cell death in a subset of T cells within seconds whereas others do not die until many hours later. Low NAD concentrations (<10 microM) suffice to trigger rapid cell death, which is associated with annexin V binding and membrane pore formation, is not blocked by the caspase inhibitor Z-VADfmk, and requires functional P2X7 receptors. The slower induction of death requires higher NAD concentrations (>100 microM), is blocked by caspase inhibitor Z-VADfmk, is associated with DNA fragmentation, and does not require P2X7 receptors. T cells degrade NAD to ADP-ribose (ADPR), and adding ADPR to T cells leads to slow but not rapid cell death. NAD but not ADPR provides the substrate for ADP-ribosyltransferase (ART-2)-mediated attachment of ADP-ribosyl groups to cell surface proteins; expression of ART-2 is required for NAD to trigger rapid but not slow cell death. These results support the hypothesis that cell surface ART-2 uses NAD but not ADPR to attach ADP-ribosyl groups to the cell surface, and that these groups act as ligands for P2X7 receptors that then induce rapid cell death. Adding either NAD or ADPR also triggers a different set of mechanisms, not requiring ART-2 or P2X7 receptors that more slowly induce cell death.  相似文献   

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