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Thrombin is an extracellular signal that activates intracellular death protease pathways inducing apoptosis in model motor neurons
Authors:Irina V Smirnova  Sherri X Zhang  Bruce A Citron  Paul M Arnold  Barry W Festoff
Abstract:Apoptosis, often also termed “programmed cell death,” occurs in normal development in the brain and spinal cord. Important to concepts of disease and potential intervention is the exciting finding that apoptosis is also found after neurotrauma and in a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Although the precise mechanism of neuronal cell loss remains unknown, much emphasis has been placed recently on the activation of cell death protease cascades within the cell. How these cascades may be activated, especially from extracellular influences, is currently poorly understood. Thrombin, the multifunctional coagulation protease, is an early phase modulator at sites of tissue injury and has been shown to induce cell death in neurons by an apoptotic mechanism by activating its receptor, PAR-1. Using a model motor neuronal cell line, NSC19, which we have shown undergoes apoptosis after treatment with classic apoptosis inducers such as the topoisomerase inhibitors camptothecin and etoposide, we unambiguously found that nanomolar thrombin induced characteristic signs of apoptosis. Strikingly, endonucleolysis was accompanied by an increase in caspase-3-like activity in cellular extracts, which correlated with both detection of caspase-induced signature cleavage of the cortical cytoskeleton component nonerythroid spectrin (α-fodrin) and identification of increased accessibility of a caspase cleavage domain, using an antibody (Ab127) made against a synthetic peptide KGDEVD. Demonstrating that thrombin activation of death proteases was linked to cell death, we were able to inhibit thrombin-induced apoptosis by using a caspase family inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Asp-(oMe)-flouromethyl ketone (Boc-D-FMK). These novel results demonstrate that thrombin serves as an extracellular “death signal” to activate intracellular protease pathways. These pathways lead to apoptotic cell death and can be modulated by inhibiting caspase activity downstream to PAR-1. Published 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 36: 64–80, 1998
  • 1 This is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.
  • Keywords:thrombin  apoptosis  protease  motor neuron  neurodegeneration
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