925 resultados para Enhances Apoptosis


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

It has previously been published that interferon-α (type I IFN) improves clinical symptoms of asthma patients. Since human basophils are major inflammatory cells in maintaining chronic allergic asthma we investigate whether type I IFN affect human blood basophils. Furthermore, previous studies have shown that spontaneous apoptosis of human basophils is slow due to constitutive expression of anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family members. In addition, IL-3 exceptionally promotes survival of basophils by enhancing constitutive expression of BCL-2 family members and by inducing de-novo expression of Pim-1 kinase. Thus, we also assessed whether type I IFN might overcome IL-3-induced survival of human basophils. Our data show that type I IFN enhances apoptosis in purified human blood basophils compared to spontaneous apoptosis of controls or type II IFN treated cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that both type I IFN and FasL enhance apoptosis in human basophils with similar efficiency in a rather additive than synergistic way. Analyses of signaling pathways reveal that type I IFN promote prolonged phosphorylation of STAT1/STAT2. By using a pan-JAK inhibitor the phosphorylation of STAT1/STAT2 is inhibited and most importantly the pro-apoptotic effect of type I IFN is abolished. On the other hand, type I IFN do not reduce IL-3-induced de novo expression of Pim-1 and BCL-2. This is in line with our observation that IL-3-induced survival is dominant over type I IFN-enhanced apoptosis. In addition, phosphorylation of p38 MAPK in type I IFN treated cells is comparable to non-treated cells. Particularly however, inhibition of this p-p38 activity abrogates apoptosis as well. We conclude that type I IFN-enhanced apoptosis is tightly regulated by the cooperation of JAK/STAT and p38 MAPK pathways. Our study identifies a so far unknown effect of type I IFN and may explain the improved clinical symptoms of asthma patients treated with type I IFN.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Human basophils are major inflammatory cells in maintaining chronic allergic asthma. It has been published that interferon-α (IFN-α) improves clinical symptoms of asthma patients. In contrast, IL-3 exacerbates airway inflammation by inducing IL-4, IL-8 and IL-13 secretion from human basophils thus regulating their immunoregulatory functions. Furthermore, IL-3 exceptionally promotes survival of basophils. Here, we assessed cellular response of human basophils treated with IFN-α alone or in combination with IL-3. Our data show that IFN-α enhances apoptosis in purified human blood basophils compared to spontaneous apoptosis of controls or IFN-γ treated cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that both IFN-α and FasL enhance apoptosis in human basophils with similar efficiency in a rather additive than synergistic way. IFN-α inhibits IL-3-induced survival to a minor degree. Particularly however, it suppresses IL-3-induced de-novo production of IL-8 and IL-13 up to 80%. In contrast, the production of IL-4 is not affected. Analyses of signaling pathways reveal that IFN-α promotes prolonged phosphorylation of STAT1/STAT2. By using a pan-JAK inhibitor the phosphorylation of STAT1/STAT2 is inhibited and most importantly the pro-apoptotic effect of IFN-α is abolished. Although the phosphorylation of p38-MAPK in IFN-α-treated cells is comparable to non-treated cells, inhibition of p-p38 activity abrogates IFN-α-enhanced apoptosis as well. We conclude that IFN-α-enhanced apoptosis is tightly regulated by the cooperation of JAK/STAT and p38-MAPK pathways. Our study identifies IFN-α as a novel inhibitor of IL-3-induced IL-8 and IL-13 production of human basophils. Taken together our study may explain the improved clinical symptoms of asthma patients treated with IFN-α.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Bcl2 phosphorylation at Ser-70 may be required for the full and potent suppression of apoptosis in IL-3-dependent myeloid cells and can result from agonist activation of mitochondrial protein kinase C (PKC). Paradoxically, expression of exogenous Bcl2 can protect parental cells from apoptosis induced by the potent PKC inhibitor, staurosporine (stauro). High concentrations of stauro of up to 1 μM only partially inhibit IL-3-stimulated Bcl2 phosphorylation but completely block PKC-mediated Bcl2 phosphorylation in vitro. These data indicate a role for a stauro-resistant Bcl2 kinase (SRK). We show that aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA), a nonpeptide activator of cellular MEK/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase, can induce Ser-70 phosphorylation of Bcl2 and support survival of cells expressing wild-type but not the phosphorylation-incompetent S70A mutant Bcl2. A role for a MEK/MAPK as a responsible SRK was implicated because the highly specific MEK/MAPK inhibitor, PD98059, also can only partially inhibit IL-3-induced Bcl2 phosphorylation, whereas the combination of PD98059 and stauro completely blocks phosphorylation and synergistically enhances apoptosis. p44MAPK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and p42 MAPK/ERK2 are activated by IL-3, colocalize with mitochondrial Bcl2, and can directly phosphorylate Bcl2 on Ser-70 in a stauro-resistant manner both in vitro and in vivo. These findings suggest a role for the ERK1/2 kinases as SRKs. Thus, the SRKs can serve to functionally link the IL-3-stimulated proliferative and survival signaling pathways and, in a novel capacity, may explain how Bcl2 can suppress stauro-induced apoptosis. In addition, although the mechanism of regulation of Bcl2 by phosphorylation is not yet clear, our results indicate that phosphorylation may functionally stabilize the Bcl2-Bax heterodimerization.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Postprandial hyperglycemia is implicated as a risk factor predisposing to vascular complications. This study was designed to assess recurrent short-term increases in glucose on markers of renal fibrogenesis. Human renal cortical fibroblasts were exposed to fluctuating short-term (2 h) increases to 15 mM D-glucose, three times a day over 72 h, on a background of 5 mM D-glucose. To determine whether observed changes were due to fluctuating osmolality, identical experiments were undertaken with cells exposed to L-glucose. Parallel experiments were performed in cells exposed to 5 mM D-glucose and constant exposure to either 15 or 7.5 mM D-glucose. Fluctuating D-glucose increased extracellular matrix, as measured by proline incorporation ( P < 0.05), collagen IV ( P < 0.005), and fibronectin production ( P < 0.001), in association with increased tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) ( P < 0.05). Sustained exposure to 15 mM D-glucose increased fibronectin ( P < 0.001), in association with increased MMP-2 ( P = 0.01) and MMP-9 activity ( P < 0.05), suggestive of a protective effect on collagen matrix accumulation. Transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)) mRNA was increased after short-term (90 min) exposure to 15 mM glucose (P < 0.05) and after 24-h exposure to 7.5 mM ? ( P < 0.05). Normalization of TGF-beta(1) secretion occurred within 48 h of constant exposure to an elevated glucose. Fluctuating L-glucose also induced TGF-beta(1) mRNA and a profibrotic profile, however, to a lesser extent than observed with exposure to fluctuating D-glucose. The results suggest that exposure to fluctuating glucose concentrations increases renal interstitial fibrosis compared with stable elevations in D-glucose. The effects are, in part, due to the inherent osmotic changes.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Systemic Mastocytosis (SM) is a hematological disorder characterized by abnormal proliferation of mast cells in various organs, ranging from indolent variants to advanced entities with poor prognosis. The KIT D816V gene mutation drives mast cell growth, but its presence alone is not fully transforming. The SETD2 gene, responsible for maintaining genomic integrity, is often impaired in advanced SM (advSM), leading to reduced expression of histone marker H3K36Me3. Proteasome inhibitors are effective in restoring SETD2 function and suppressing mast cell growth, offering an alternative therapy for patients resistant to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Aberrant expression of Plk1 and Aurora kinase A correlates with SETD2 loss and can be targeted with inhibitors like alisertib and volasertib, leading to reduced cell growth and apoptosis. Additionally, inhibition of Wee1 enhances apoptosis and reduces colony growth in SM cells. Molecular diagnostic techniques like droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) offer a less invasive and reliable method for detecting the D816V mutation in peripheral blood, and efforts to standardize molecular assays across laboratories show promising reproducibility. Overall, this research provides new insights into the mechanisms of advanced SM, identifies potential therapeutic targets, and validates molecular diagnostic tools for SM diagnosis.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Soy extracts have been claimed to be neuroprotective against brain insults, an effect related to the estrogenic properties of isoflavones. However, the effects of individual isoflavones on obesity-induced disruption of adult neurogenesis have not yet been analyzed. In the present study we explore the effects of pharmacological administration of daidzein, a main soy isoflavone, in cell proliferation, cell apoptosis and gliosis in the adult hippocampus of animals exposed to a very high-fat diet. Rats made obese after 12-week exposure to a standard or high-fat (HFD, 60%) diets were treated with daidzein (50 mg kg(-1)) for 13 days. Then, plasma levels of metabolites and metabolic hormones, cell proliferation in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus (SGZ), and immunohistochemical markers of hippocampal cell apoptosis (caspase-3), gliosis (GFAP and Iba-1), food reward factor FosB and estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) were analyzed. Treatment with daidzein reduced food/caloric intake and body weight gain in obese rats. This was associated with glucose tolerance, low levels of HDL-cholesterol, insulin, adiponectin and testosterone, and high levels of leptin and 17β-estradiol. Daidzein increased the number of phospho-histone H3 and 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU)-ir cells detected in the SGZ of standard diet and HFD-fed rats. Daidzein reversed the HFD-associated enhanced immunohistochemical expression of caspase-3, FosB, GFAP, Iba-1 and ERα in the hippocampus, being more prominent in the dentate gyrus. These results suggest that pharmacological treatment with isoflavones regulates metabolic alterations associated with enhancement of cell proliferation and reduction of apoptosis and gliosis in response to high-fat diet.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Colon cancer is a leading and expanding cause of death worldwide. A major contributory factor to this disease is diet composition; some components are beneficial (e.g. dietary fibre) whilst others are detrimental (e.g. alcohol). Garlic oil is a prominent dietary constituent that prevents the development of colorectal cancer. This effect is believed to be mainly due to diallyl disulphide (DADS), which selectively induces redox stress in cancerous (rather than normal) cells which leads to apoptotic cell death. However, the detailed mechanism by which DADS causes apoptosis remains unclear. We show that DADS-treatment of colonic adenocarcinoma cells (HT-29) initiates a cascade of molecular events characteristic of apoptosis. These include a decrease in cellular proliferation, translocation of phosphatidylserine to the plasma-membrane outer-layer, activation of caspase-3, genomic-DNA fragmentation and G2/M phase cell-cycle arrest. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), particularly butyrate (abundantly produced in the gut by bacterial fermentation of dietary polysaccharides), enhance colonic cell integrity but, in contrast, inhibit colonic-cancer cell growth. Combining DADS with butyrate augmented the effect of butyrate on HT-29 cells. These results suggest that the anti-cancerous properties of DADS afford greater benefit when supplied with other favourable dietary factors (SCFA/polysaccharides) that likewise reduce colonic tumour development.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common primary malignant bone tumor, usually developing in children and adolescents, and is highly invasive and metastatic, potentially developing chemoresistance. Thus, novel effective treatment regimens are urgently needed. This study was the first to investigate the anticancer effects of dehydroxymethylepoxyquinomicin (DHMEQ), a highly specific nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) inhibitor, on the OS cell lines HOS and MG-63. We demonstrate that NF-kappa B blockade by DHMEQ inhibits proliferation, decreases the mitotic index, and triggers apoptosis of OS cells. We examined the effects of combination treatment with DHMEQ and cisplatin, doxorubicin, or methotrexate, drugs commonly used in OS treatment. Using the median effect method of Chou and Talalay, we evaluated the combination indices for simultaneous and sequential treatment schedules. In all cases, combination with a chemotherapeutic drug produced a synergistic effect, even at low single-agent cytotoxic levels. When cells were treated with DHMEQ and cisplatin, a more synergistic effect was obtained using simultaneous treatment. For the doxorubicin and methotrexate combination, a more synergistic effect was achieved with sequential treatment using DHMEQ before chemotherapy. These synergistic effects were accompanied by enhancement of chemoinduced apoptosis. Interestingly, the highest apoptotic effect was reached with sequential exposure in both cell lines, independent of the chemotherapeutic agent used. Likewise, DHMEQ decreased cell invasion and migration, crucial steps for tumor progression. Our data suggest that combining DHMEQ with chemotherapeutic drugs might be useful for planning new therapeutic strategies for OS treatment, mainly in resistant and metastatic cases. Anti-Cancer Drugs 23:638-650 (C) 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health broken vertical bar Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

BACKGROUND Resistance to chemotherapy in lung adenocarcinoma remains a major obstacle. We examined the potential role of Octamer-binding transcription factor-4B (OCT4B) in enhancing sensitivity of lung adenocarcinoma cells to cisplatin. MATERIALS AND METHODS RNAi interference was used to examine the role of OCT4B in cisplatin-treated A549 cells. Cells were transfected with OCT4B siRNA prior to a 48-h cisplatin treatment. Propidium iodide (PI) and caspase-3 staining were used to determine cell viability and apoptosis. Cell-cycle analysis was performed to evaluate alterations in phase distribution. RESULTS OCT4B suppression in cells increased the number of non-viable, PI(+), and apoptotic, caspase-3(+) cells in the presence and absence of cisplatin treatment. Importantly, cisplatin treatment of OCT4B-suppressed cells resulted in a marked transition of cells from G0/G1 to G2/M phase. CONCLUSION Silencing of OCT4B confers sensitivity to cisplatin treatment in A549 cells via cell-cycle regulation, increased proliferation and enhancement of cisplatin-induced apoptosis. OCT4B clearly protects A549 cells from apoptosis.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family of anti-apoptotic proteins regulate programmed cell death and/or apoptosis. One such protein, X-linked IAP (XIAP), inhibits the activity of the cell death proteases, caspase-3, -7, and -9. In this study, using constitutively active mutants of caspase-3, we found that XIAP promotes the degradation of active-form caspase-3, but not procaspase-3, in living cells. The XIAP mutants, which cannot interact with caspase-3, had little or no activity of promoting the degradation of caspase-3. RING finger mutants of XIAP also could not promote the degradation of caspase-3. A proteasome inhibitor suppressed the degradation of caspase-3 by XIAP, suggesting the involvement of a ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the degradation. An in vitro ubiquitination assay revealed that XIAP acts as a ubiquitin-protein ligase for caspase-3. Caspase-3 was ubiquitinated in the presence of XIAP in living cells. Both the association of XIAP with caspase-3 and the RING finger domain of XIAP were essential for ubiquitination. Finally, the RING finger mutants of XIAP were less effective than wild-type XIAP at preventing apoptosis induced by overexpression of either active-form caspase-3 or Fas. These results demonstrate that the ubiquitin-protein ligase activity of XIAP promotes the degradation of caspase-3, which enhances its anti-apoptotic effect.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

To study the effect of apoptosis on gene amplification, we have constructed HeLa S3 cell lines in which the expression of bcl-2 (BCL2) can be controlled by tetracycline in the growth medium. Induction of Bcl-2 expression caused a temporary delay of apoptosis and resulted in roughly a 3-fold increase in the frequency of resistant colonies when cells were selected with trimetrexate. This resistance was due to amplification of the dihydrofolate reductase gene. Cells grown out of the pooled resistant colonies retained the same level of resistance to trimetrexate whether Bcl-2 was induced or repressed, consistent with the theory that Bcl-2 functions by facilitating gene amplification, rather than being the resistance mechanism per se. Pretreating cells with aphidicolin is another method to increase gene amplification frequency. When Bcl-2-expressing cells were pretreated with aphidicolin, the resulting increase in gene amplification frequency was approximately the product of the increases caused by aphidicolin pretreatment or Bcl-2 expression alone, indicating that Bcl-2 increases gene amplification through a mechanism independent of that of aphidicolin pretreatment. These results are consistent with the concept that gene amplification occurs at a higher frequency during drug-induced cell cycle perturbation. Bcl-2 evidently increases the number of selected amplified colonies by prolonging cell survival during the perturbation.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The retinoblastoma protein (RB) has been proposed to function as a negative regulator of cell proliferation by complexing with cellular proteins such as the transcription factor E2F. To study the biological consequences of the RB/E2F-1 interaction, point mutants of E2F-1 which fail to bind to RB were isolated by using the yeast two-hybrid system. Sequence analysis revealed that within the minimal 18-amino acid peptide of E2F-1 required for RB binding, five residues, Tyr (position 411), Glu (419), and Asp-Leu-Phe (423-425), are critical. These amino acids are conserved among the known E2F family members. While mutation of any of these five amino acids abolished binding to RB, all mutants retained their full transactivation potential. Expression of mutated E2F-1, when compared with that of wild-type, significantly accelerated entry into S phase and subsequent apoptosis. These results provide direct genetic evidence for the biological significance of the RB/E2F interaction and strongly suggest that the interplay between RB and E2F is critical for proper cell cycle progression.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Cancer is caused by defects in the signalling mechanisms that govern cell proliferation and apoptosis. It is well known that calcium-dependent signalling pathways play a critical role in cell regulation. A tight control of calcium homeostasis by transporters and channel proteins is required to assure a proper functioning of the calcium-sensitive signal transduction pathways that regulate cell growth and apoptosis. The Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase 2 (PMCA2) has been recently identified as a negative regulator of apoptosis that can play a significant role in cancer progression by conferring cells resistance to apoptosis. We have previously reported an inhibitory interaction between PMCA2 and the calcium-activated signalling molecule calcineurin in breast cancer cells. Here we demonstrate that disruption of the PMCA2/calcineurin interaction in a variety of human breast cancer cells results in activation of the calcineurin/NFAT pathway, up-regulation in the expression of the pro-apoptotic protein Fas Ligand, and in a concomitant loss of cell viability. Reduction in cell viability is the consequence of an increase in cell apoptosis. Impairment of the PMCA2/calcineurin interaction enhances paclitaxel-mediated cytotoxicity of breast tumoral cells. Our results suggest that therapeutic modulation of the PMCA2/calcineurin interaction might have important clinical applications to improve current treatments for breast cancer patients.