[Involvement of ICE/CED 3 family proteases in antitumor agent-induced apoptosis]
- PMID: 9030233
[Involvement of ICE/CED 3 family proteases in antitumor agent-induced apoptosis]
Abstract
Some chemotherapeutic agents, as well as TNF and Fas, induce apoptotic cell death in tumor cells, but the cellular components involved in the process have not yet been identified. Interleukin 1 beta converting enzyme (ICE) is a mammalian homolog of CED-3, a protein required for programmed cell death in nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. We found that a selective inhibitor of ICE/ced 3 family proteases, benzyloxycarbonyl Asp CH2OC(O) 2 6,-dichlorobenzene (Z-Asp-CH2-DCB). completely blocked the apoptotic cell death of human leukemia cells caused by etoposide, camptothecin, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl cytosine (Ara-C) and adriamycin. Moreover, in antitumor agent-treated U937 cells, an ICE-like (CPP32-like) protease was strongly activated. These results indicate that ICE/ ced 3 family proteases are involved in antitumor agent-induced apoptosis. Activation of ICE family proteases plays a key role in apoptosis. However, the subsequent mechanisms resulting in apoptosis are largely unknown. We identified actin as a substrate of ICE family proteases. Cleavage of actin and other substrate proteins by ICE family proteases could be critical in the ongoing process of antitumor agent-induced apoptosis in tumor cells.
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