Molecular control of apoptosis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

Molecular control of apoptosis

Description:

'Macroautophagy' - disposal of whole organelles (mitochondria, ... Adenovirus: E1A protein functions to promote an S-phase-like state in infected cells ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:111
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: MDA31
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Molecular control of apoptosis


1
Molecular control of apoptosis
  • David J. McConkey, Ph.D.
  • Dept. Cancer Biology
  • U.T. M.D. Anderson Cancer Center

2
Modes of physiological cell death
  • Apoptosis cellular shrinkage, suppresses
    inflammation
  • Necrosis cellular swelling, loss of
    intracellular contents, inflammation
  • Autophagy auto-digestion, can allow for survival
    in face of limited nutrient availability, may
    also control tumor expansion

3
(No Transcript)
4
Autophagy
  • Macroautophagy - disposal of whole organelles
    (mitochondria, peroxisomes) and protein
    aggregates
  • Chaparone-mediated autophagy disposal of
    specific proteins and possibly protein aggregates
  • Both complement the activity of the proteasome in
    bulk protein turnover

5
Knockout mice
  • Mice lacking crucial autophagy genes (Atg5, Atg7)
    develop neurodegenerative disease that is similar
    to certain human pathologies (Alzheimers,
    Huntingtins, etc)
  • Neurons develop large protein aggregates
    (inclusion bodies)
  • Similar effects are observed in cells with
    disrupted proteasome function

6
Autophagy in yeast
  • Activated when nutrients are in limited supply
  • Allows cells to recycle the energy that is
    stored in cellular structures until a food supply
    is provided

7
Autophagy in cancer
  • Beth Levine showed that tumors develop defects
    in autophagy (beclin-1) as they progress
  • Craig Thompson showed that tumors with defective
    apoptosis use autophagy to produce ATP when their
    growth factors are withdrawn

8
Autophagy and signal transduction
  • Key regulator mTOR (downstream target of the
    PI-3 kinase/AKT pathway)
  • Active AKT activates mTOR, which then inhibits
    autophagy
  • Another input phosphorylation of eIF2??activates
    autophagy via mechanisms that are still being
    identified

9
Binding of growth factor ligands activates kinase
receptors leading to recruitment of PI3K to
receptor complex
Sansal, I. et al. J Clin Oncol 222954-2963 2004
10
The unfolded protein response
Szegezdi et al, EMBO Rep. 7(9) 880-85, 2006
11
(No Transcript)
12
(No Transcript)
13
Caspase structures
14
tBID
SMAC
IAPs
15
Release of Apoptotic Factors from the Mitochondria
Smac
Mitochondria
IAP
Caspase 9
Smac
IAP
AIF
Apaf-1
dATP
Cytochrome C
To Nucleus
16
(No Transcript)
17
Inhibitor of apoptosis proteins
  • Originally identified in viruses that infect
    insect cells (Lois Miller)
  • Subsequently found in C. elegans, mammalian cells
  • Inhibit apoptosis by direct binding to caspases
    (procaspases and active caspases)
  • Also regulate death receptor signaling

18
IAP structural features
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
(IAPs)
(Caspase)
24
(No Transcript)
25
The BCL-2 family
  • BCL-2 Cloned at the t(1418) breakpoint in
    follicular lymphoma
  • Cory, Korsmeyer Inhibits apoptosis
  • Family consists of cell death inhibitors and cell
    death inducers
  • Recent studies Regulate release of
    mitochondrial factors

26
Bcl-2 Family Members Domains
Anti-Apoptotic
Bcl-2 Bcl-xL
BH4
BH2
BH3
BH1
TM
Pro-Apoptotic
Bax Bak
BH2
BH3
BH1
TM
Bid Bad
BH3
Adapted from Chao and Korsmeyer, 1998
27
(No Transcript)
28
How do BCL-2 family proteins regulate cytochrome
c release?
  • Korsmeyer Tetramerization of Bak, Bax in
    mitochondrial membrane forms a pore large enough
    to accommodate release
  • Kroemer, Tsujimoto Proteins interact with key
    components of a structure called the PT pore
  • Can also regulate ion fluxes in ER, mitochondria

29
Bcl-2 Family Member Regulation of the Mitochondria
PTP
VDAC
Bax
Bak
Bak
Bak
Bid
Bcl-2
Bak
BH3
Bax
Cyt c
Mitochondria
Cyt c
Bax
Bax
Bax
Bax
Bax
Anions
Bcl-2
Bcl-2
Bcl-2
Bax
Bax
Cations
30
Cell death signals in cancer progression/metastasi
s
  • Hypoxia/hypoglycemia (Thompson)
  • Growth factor withdrawal
  • Detachment from basement membrane, adjacent cells
    in tissues (aniokis)
  • Death-promoting signals from the environment
    (death receptors)

31
Early work Evan and Wyllie
  • Expressed an estrogen receptor-Myc fusion protein
    in Rat-1 fibroblasts
  • Under normal circumstances Serum withdrawal
    stimulates growth arrest (G1)
  • However, estrogen-mediated activation of Myc
    abrogated growth arrest
  • However, under these conditions rates of cell
    death were also increased

32
Evan Myc couples proliferation to cell death
  • In normal cells Expression of Myc
    simultaneously promotes S phase progression and
    cell death
  • Suppression of the latter requires the presence
    of exogenous survival factors
  • These factors often take the form of cytokines
    (IGF-1, PDGF, etc)

33
Effects of enforced Myc expression in mice
  • Transgenic mice expressing Myc under the control
    of the immunoglobulin promoter/enhancer
  • Stimulates hyperplasia in mature B cells
    associated with increased apoptosis
  • Progression to lymphoma requires a second genetic
    event that suppresses apoptosis (mutation of p53,
    BCL-2 expression)

34
DNA viruses also engage the apoptotic pathway
  • Adenovirus E1A protein functions to promote an
    S-phase-like state in infected cells
  • In mutant viruses lacking E1B, infection drives
    S-phase and apoptosis
  • E1B Encodes a BCL-2 homologue (E1B-19K) and a
    p53-binding protein (E1B-52K)

35
Coupling of cell cycle dysregulation and cell
death p53
  • Oncogene-mediated cell death (Myc, Ras, E1A)
    appears to be driven by p53 (p63, p73)
  • Cell death in Rb-/- mice is also p53-dependent
  • Mechanism may involve p14/p19ARF-mediated
    activation of p53

36
The first p53 death target Bax
  • Miyashita and Reed, Cell 80 293-299, 1995
  • Identified p53 binding site in Bax promoter
  • Observation has been confirmed by numerous groups
  • However, Bax is also regulated by BH3-only
    proteins and sometimes changes in subcellular
    localization

37
Viral disruption of p53 pathway regulation
38
DQMD
baculovirus p35
(effector caspases)
p10
p25
LVAD
cowpox virus crmA
p5
p33
(caspases 1 and 8)
39
Survival signals and apoptosis
  • Cells beyond the blastomere stage of development
    require continuous exposure to environmental
    survival signals to suppress apoptosis
  • Can be provided by soluble factors (growth
    factors, cytokines) and adhesion molecules
    (integrins, coreceptors)

40
Binding of growth factor ligands activates kinase
receptors leading to recruitment of PI3K to
receptor complex
Sansal, I. et al. J Clin Oncol 222954-2963 2004
41
The AKT pathway is negatively regulated by PTEN
  • PTEN phosphatase on chromosome 10
  • Also known as MMAC mutated in multiple
    adenocarcinomas
  • Lipid phosphatase

42
PTEN (blue), a lipid phosphatase
Sansal, I. et al. J Clin Oncol 222954-2963 2004
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com