Histone H2AX is a ubiquitous member of the H2A histone family that differs from the other H2A histones by the presence of an evolutionarily conserved C-terminal motif, -KKATQASQEY. The serine residue in this motif becomes rapidly phosphorylated in cells and animals when DNA double-stranded breaks are introduced into their chromatin by various physical and chemical means. In the present communication we show that this phosphorylated form of H2AX, referred to as ␥-H2AX, appears during apoptosis concurrently with the initial appearance of high molecular weight DNA fragments. ␥-H2AX forms before the appearance of internucleosomal DNA fragments and the externalization of phosphatidylserine to the outer membrane leaflet. ␥-H2AX formation is inhibited by N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-AlaAsp-fluoromethyl ketone and the inhibitor of caspaseactivated DNase, and it is induced when DNase I and restriction enzymes are introduced into cells, suggesting that any apoptotic endonuclease is sufficient to induce ␥-H2AX formation. These results indicate that ␥-H2AX formation is an early chromatin modification following initiation of DNA fragmentation during apoptosis.
Defective apoptosis not only promotes tumorigenesis, but also can confound chemotherapeutic response. Here we demonstrate that the proapoptotic BH3-only protein BIM is a tumor suppressor in epithelial solid tumors and also is a determinant in paclitaxel sensitivity in vivo. Furthermore, the H-ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway conferred resistance to paclitaxel that was dependent on functional inactivation of BIM. Whereas paclitaxel induced BIM accumulation and BIM-dependent apoptosis in vitro and in tumors in vivo, the H-ras/MAPK pathway suppressed this BIM induction by phosphorylating BIM and targeting BIM for degradation in proteasomes. The proteasome inhibitor Velcade (P-341, Bortezomib) restored BIM induction, abrogated H-ras-dependent paclitaxel resistance, and promoted BIM-dependent tumor regression, suggesting the potential benefits of combinatorial chemotherapy of Velcade and paclitaxel.
Derivatives of camptothecins, topoisomerase I inhibitors and 7-hydroxystaurosporine (UCN-01), a protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor and cell cycle checkpoint abrogator, are promising anticancer drugs. We characterized the apoptotic response to camptothecin and UCN-01 for the 8 human breast carcinoma cell lines (MCF-7, MCF-7/ADR, T47D, HS578T, BT549, MDA-N, MDA MB231, MDA435) from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Anticancer Drug Screen. MCF-7 and T47D cells exhibited marked resistance to apoptosis, whereas MCF-7/ADR (NCI/ADR-RES) and HS578T cells exhibited the most pronounced apoptotic response. Apoptotic response was not correlated with growth inhibition measured by sulforhodamine B (SRB) assay, indicating that apoptosis is not the only mechanism of drug-induced cell death. Measurements of topoisomerase I levels and cleavage complexes and of PKC isoforms demonstrated that primary target inhibition was not correlated with apoptotic response. Several key apoptotic pathways were evaluated. Only MCF-7 cells had wild-type p53, indicating that p53 is not required for drug-induced apoptosis. MCF-7 cells also showed the highest MDM-2 expression (along with T47D cells, which were also resistant to apoptosis). Bcl-2, Mcl-1 and caspases 2 and 3 protein levels varied widely, whereas Bax expression was comparable among cell lines. Interestingly, Bcl-2, Mcl-1 and Bcl-X L cumulative expressions were inversely correlated with apoptotic response. Our results provide a comparative molecular characterization for the breast cancer cell lines of the NCI Anticancer Drug Screen and demonstrate the diversity of cellular responses to drugs (apoptosis vs. cell cycle arrest) and the importance of multifactorial analyses for modulating/ predicting the apoptotic response to chemotherapy.
We have used a human leukemia cell line that, after homologous recombination knockout of the gp91-phox subunit of the phagocyte respiratory-burst oxidase cytochrome b -558, mimics chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD) to study the role of oxygen radicals in apoptosis. Camptothecin (CPT), a topoisomerase I inhibitor, induced significantly more apoptosis in PLB-985 cells than in X-CGD cells. Sensitivity to CPT was enhanced after neutrophilic differentiation, but was lost after monocytic differentiation. No difference between the two cell lines was observed after treatment with other apoptosis inducers, including etoposide, ultraviolet radiation, ionizing radiation, hydrogen peroxide, or 7-hydroxystaurosporine. After granulocytic differentiation of both cell lines, CPT still induced apoptosis, suggesting independence from replication in fully differentiated and growth-arrested cells. Pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (an antioxidant inhibitor of NF-B) and catalase partially inhibited CPT-induced DNA fragmentation in granulocytic-differentiated PLB-985 cells, but had no effect in X-CGD cells. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that reactive oxygen intermediates were generated in CPT-treated PLB-985 cells. These data indicate that oxygen radicals generated by NADPH oxidase may contribute directly or indirectly to CPT-induced apoptosis in human leukemia and in neutrophilic-differentiated cells. ( J. Clin. Invest. 1998Invest. . 102:1961Invest. -1968
The present study explored the role of the cell surface receptor Fas (CD95/APO-1) in apoptosis induced by camptothecin (CPT) in the HT29 colon carcinoma cell line. CPT-induced apoptosis was associated with high molecular weight DNA fragmentation as measured by ®lter elution. This fragmentation was inhibited by the caspase inhibitor, z-VAD-fmk and by cycloheximide, which also prevented proteolytic activation of caspase-3 and poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase cleavage. Under such conditions, Fas, Fas ligand, Bax, and p21 expression were increased and Fas recruited the FADD adaptor. Fas expression increase was blocked by cycloheximide but not by z-VAD-fmk, consistent with caspase activation downstream from Fas. Treatment of HT29 cells with FasL or with the CH-11 agonistic anti-Fas antibody potentiated the apoptotic response of cells treated with CPT. The anti-Fas blocking antibody ZB4 and the Fasligand inhibitor failed to protect HT29 cells from CPTinduced apoptosis. Such a protection was obtained by transient expression of constructs encoding a dominantnegative mutant of FADD, FADD in an antisense orientation and E8 or MC159 viral proteins that inhibit Fas-induced apoptosis at the level of FADD and procaspase-8, respectively. Together, these data show that topoisomerase I-mediated DNA damage-induced apoptosis involves activation of the Fas pathway without detectable Fas-ligand requirement in CPT-treated cells.
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