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      Differential Induction of Apoptosis in B16 Melanoma and EL‐4 Lymphoma Cells by Cytostatin and Bactobolin

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          Abstract

          Most solid tumor cells are less sensitive to apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs than hematopoietic cancer cells. However, the mechanisms of the different responses to apoptosis in these cell types remain unknown. To explore this question, we used B16 melanoma and EL‐4 lymphoma cells as solid tumor‐ and hematopoietic cancer‐derived cell lines, and examined the effects of two apoptosis inducers, cytostatin and bactobolin, on both cell lines. Apoptosis in B16 cells was induced strongly by bactobolin, but weakly by cytostatin. In contrast, apoptosis in EL‐4 cells was induced strongly by cytostatin, but weakly by bactobolin. While caspase‐3 was activated upon induction of apoptosis in both cell lines, Ac‐DEVD‐CHO, a specific inhibitor of caspase‐3, suppressed only the apoptosis in B16 cells. In B16 cells, cyclins E, A, and B1 were decreased by strongly apoptosis‐inducing bactobolin prior to apoptosis commitment, but cyclin E was not decreased by weakly apoptosis‐inducing cytostatin. On the other hand, in EL‐4 cells cyclins D1, E, A, and B1 were decreased by strongly apoptosis‐inducing cytostatin prior to apoptosis commitment, but neither cyclin A nor B1 was decreased by weakly apoptosis‐inducing bactobolin. These results indicate that the dependency of apoptosis induction on caspase activity is different between the two cell lines. Furthermore, there may be an inverse correlation between specific cyclins and apoptosis induction in the two cell lines.

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          Most cited references21

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          Identification and inhibition of the ICE/CED-3 protease necessary for mammalian apoptosis.

          The protease responsible for the cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and necessary for apoptosis has been purified and characterized. This enzyme, named apopain, is composed of two subunits of relative molecular mass (M(r)) 17K and 12K that are derived from a common proenzyme identified as CPP32. This proenzyme is related to interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme (ICE) and CED-3, the product of a gene required for programmed cell death in Caenorhabditis elegans. A potent peptide aldehyde inhibitor has been developed and shown to prevent apoptotic events in vitro, suggesting that apopain/CPP32 is important for the initiation of apoptotic cell death.
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            Disruption of epithelial cell-matrix interactions induces apoptosis

            Cell-matrix interactions have major effects upon phenotypic features such as gene regulation, cytoskeletal structure, differentiation, and aspects of cell growth control. Programmed cell death (apoptosis) is crucial for maintaining appropriate cell number and tissue organization. It was therefore of interest to determine whether cell- matrix interactions affect apoptosis. The present report demonstrates that apoptosis was induced by disruption of the interactions between normal epithelial cells and extracellular matrix. We have termed this phenomenon "anoikis." Overexpression of bcl-2 protected cells against anoikis. Cellular sensitivity to anoikis was apparently regulated: (a) anoikis did not occur in normal fibroblasts; (b) it was abrogated in epithelial cells by transformation with v-Ha-ras, v-src, or treatment with phorbol ester; (c) sensitivity to anoikis was conferred upon HT1080 cells or v-Ha-ras-transformed MDCK cells by reverse- transformation with adenovirus E1a; (d) anoikis in MDCK cells was alleviated by the motility factor, scatter factor. The results suggest that the circumvention of anoikis accompanies the acquisition of anchorage independence or cell motility.
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              Bcl-2 heterodimerizes in vivo with a conserved homolog, Bax, that accelerates programmed cell death.

              Bcl-2 protein is able to repress a number of apoptotic death programs. To investigate the mechanism of Bcl-2's effect, we examined whether Bcl-2 interacted with other proteins. We identified an associated 21 kd protein partner, Bax, that has extensive amino acid homology with Bcl-2, focused within highly conserved domains I and II. Bax is encoded by six exons and demonstrates a complex pattern of alternative RNA splicing that predicts a 21 kd membrane (alpha) and two forms of cytosolic protein (beta and gamma). Bax homodimerizes and forms heterodimers with Bcl-2 in vivo. Overexpressed Bax accelerates apoptotic death induced by cytokine deprivation in an IL-3-dependent cell line. Overexpressed Bax also counters the death repressor activity of Bcl-2. These data suggest a model in which the ratio of Bcl-2 to Bax determines survival or death following an apoptotic stimulus.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Jpn J Cancer Res
                Jpn. J. Cancer Res
                10.1111/(ISSN)1349-7006a
                CAS
                Japanese Journal of Cancer Research : Gann
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0910-5050
                1876-4673
                February 1999
                : 90
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1111/cas.1999.90.issue-2 )
                : 219-225
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Institute for Chemotherapy, M. C. R. F., 18–24 Aza‐Motono, Miyamoto, Numazu, Shizuoka 410–0301
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] To whom correspondence should be addressed. E‐mail: imcic@ 123456shizuokanet.ne.jp
                Article
                CAE219
                10.1111/j.1349-7006.1999.tb00736.x
                5926052
                10189893
                9e648e2e-0e5a-408e-a227-bc9875581534
                History
                Page count
                References: 24, Pages: 7
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                February 1999
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.6.9 mode:remove_FC converted:04.11.2015

                solid tumor,apoptosis,cytostatin,bactobolin,cyclin
                solid tumor, apoptosis, cytostatin, bactobolin, cyclin

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