Proteasome activator PA28c (REGc, Ki antigen) has recently been demonstrated to display anti-apoptotic properties via enhancing Mdm2-p53 interaction, thereby facilitating ubiquitination and down-regulation of the tumor suppressor p53. In this study we demonstrate a correlation between cellular PA28c levels and the sensitivity of cells towards apoptosis in different cellular contexts thereby confirming a role of proteasome activator PA28c as an anti-apoptotic regulator. We investigated the anti-apoptotic role of PA28c upon UV-C stimulation in B8 mouse fibroblasts stably overexpressing the PA28c-encoding PSME3 gene and upon butyrate-induced apoptosis in human HT29 adenocarcinoma cells with silenced PSME3 gene. Interestingly, our results demonstrate that PA28c has a strong influence on different apoptotic hallmarks, especially p53 phosphorylation and caspase activation. In detail, PA28c and effector caspases mutually restrict each other. PA28c is a caspase substrate, if PA28c levels are low. In contrast, PA28c overexpression reduces caspase activities, including the caspase-dependent processing of PA28c. Furthermore, overexpression of PA28c resulted in a nuclear accumulation of transcriptional active p53. In summary, our findings indicate that even in a p53-dominated cellular context, pro-apoptotic signaling might be overcome by PA28c-mediated caspase inhibition.