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. 2008 May 9;283(19):12851-61.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M800403200. Epub 2008 Mar 5.

Clusterin activates survival through the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway

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Free article

Clusterin activates survival through the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway

Hayet Ammar et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Clusterin is, in its major form, a secreted heterodimeric disulfide-linked glycoprotein (75-80 kDa). It was first linked to cell death in the rat ventral prostate after androgen deprivation. Recent studies have demonstrated that overexpression of clusterin in prostatic cells protects them against tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha)-induced apoptosis. However the details of this survival mechanism remain undefined. Here, we investigate how clusterin prevents cells from undergoing TNFalpha-induced apoptosis. We established a double-stable prostatic cell line for inducible clusterin by using the Tet-On gene expression system. We demonstrated that 50% of the cells overexpressing clusterin escaped from TNFalpha- and actinomycin D-induced cell death. Moreover we demonstrated that the incubation of MLL cells with conditioned medium containing the secreted clusterin or the supplementation of purified clusterin in the extracellular medium decreased the TNFalpha-induced apoptosis significantly. This extracellular action implicates megalin, the putative membrane receptor for clusterin to mediate survival. Indeed clusterin overexpression up-regulated the expression of megalin and induced its phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner. We interestingly showed that clusterin overexpression is associated with the up-regulation of the phosphorylation of Akt. Activated Akt induced the phosphorylation of Bad and caused a decrease of cytochrome c release. These results enable us to pinpoint one mechanism by which secreted clusterin favors survival in androgen-independent prostate cancer cells, implicating its receptor megalin and Akt survival pathway.

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