Fas ligand-independent, FADD-mediated activation of the Fas death pathway by anticancer drugs

被引:286
作者
Micheau, O [1 ]
Solary, E [1 ]
Hammann, A [1 ]
Dimanche-Boitrel, MT [1 ]
机构
[1] Fac Med & Pharm, U517, Pole Biol & Therapie Canc, JE515,INSERM, F-21033 Dijon, France
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.274.12.7987
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Trimerization of the Fas receptor (CD95, APO-1), a membrane bound protein, triggers cell death by apoptosis. The main death pathway activated by Fas receptor involves the adaptor protein FADD (for Fas-associated death domain) that connects Fas receptor to the caspase cascade. Anticancer drugs have been shown to enhance both Fas receptor and Fas ligand expression on tumor cells. The contribution of Fas ligand-Fas receptor interactions to the cytotoxic activity of these drugs remains controversial. Here, we show that neither the antagonistic anti-Fas antibody ZB4 nor the Fas-IgG molecule inhibit drug-induced apoptosis in three different cell lines. The expression of Fas ligand on the plasma membrane, which is identified in untreated U937 human leukemic cells but remains undetectable in untreated HT29 and HCT116 human colon cancer cell lines, is not modified by exposure to various cytotoxic agents. These drugs induce the clustering of Fas receptor, as observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy, and its interaction with FADD, as demonstrated by co-immunoprecipitation, Overexpression of FADD by stable transfection sensitizes tumor cells to drug-induced cell death and cytotoxicity, whereas down-regulation of FADD by transient transfection of an antisense construct decreases tumor cell sensitivity to drug-induced apoptosis, These results were confirmed by transient transfection of constructs encoding either a FADD dominant negative mutant or MC159 or E8 viral proteins that inhibit the FADD/caspase-8 pathway. These results suggest that drug-induced cell death involves the Fas/FADD pathway in a Fas ligand-independent fashion.
引用
收藏
页码:7987 / 7992
页数:6
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   Ultraviolet light induces apoptosis via direct activation of CD95 (Fas/APO-1) independently of its ligand CD95L [J].
Aragane, Y ;
Kulms, D ;
Metze, D ;
Wilkes, G ;
Pöppelmann, B ;
Luger, TA ;
Schwarz, T .
JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1998, 140 (01) :171-182
[2]   ACTIVATION OF PROGRAMMED CELL-DEATH (APOPTOSIS) BY CISPLATIN, OTHER ANTICANCER DRUGS, TOXINS AND HYPERTHERMIA [J].
BARRY, MA ;
BEHNKE, CA ;
EASTMAN, A .
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1990, 40 (10) :2353-2362
[3]   Radiation-induced apoptosis in human lymphocytes and lymphoma cells critically relies on the up-regulation of CD95/Fas/APO-1 ligand [J].
Belka, C ;
Marini, P ;
Budach, W ;
Schulze-Osthoff, K ;
Lang, F ;
Gulbins, E ;
Bamberg, M .
RADIATION RESEARCH, 1998, 149 (06) :588-595
[4]   Death effector domain-containing herpesvirus and poxvirus proteins inhibit both Fas- and TNFR1-induced apoptosis [J].
Bertin, J ;
Armstrong, RC ;
Ottilie, S ;
Martin, DA ;
Wang, Y ;
Banks, S ;
Wang, GH ;
Senkevich, TG ;
Alnemri, ES ;
Moss, B ;
Lenardo, MJ ;
Tomaselli, KJ ;
Cohen, JI .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1997, 94 (04) :1172-1176
[5]   Involvement of MACH, a novel MORT1/FADD-interacting protease, in Fas/APO-1- and TNF receptor-induced cell death [J].
Boldin, MP ;
Goncharov, TM ;
Goltsev, YV ;
Wallach, D .
CELL, 1996, 85 (06) :803-815
[6]   CERAMIDE SYNTHASE MEDIATES DAUNORUBICIN-INDUCED APOPTOSIS - AN ALTERNATIVE MECHANISM FOR GENERATING DEATH SIGNALS [J].
BOSE, R ;
VERHEIJ, M ;
HAIMOVITZFRIEDMAN, A ;
SCOTTO, K ;
FUKS, Z ;
KOLESNICK, R .
CELL, 1995, 82 (03) :405-414
[7]   FADD, A NOVEL DEATH DOMAIN-CONTAINING PROTEIN, INTERACTS WITH THE DEATH DOMAIN OF FAS AND INITIATES APOPTOSIS [J].
CHINNAIYAN, AM ;
OROURKE, K ;
TEWARI, M ;
DIXIT, VM .
CELL, 1995, 81 (04) :505-512
[8]  
Chinnaiyan AM, 1996, J BIOL CHEM, V271, P4961
[9]   The anti-cancer drug etoposide can induce caspase-8 processing and apoptosis in the absence of CD95 receptor-ligand interaction [J].
Cock, JGRBD ;
de Vries, E ;
Williams, GT ;
Borst, J .
APOPTOSIS, 1998, 3 (01) :17-25
[10]   Comparison of apoptosis in wild-type and fas-resistant cells: Chemotherapy-induced apoptosis is not dependent on Fas/Fas ligand interactions [J].
Eischen, CM ;
Kottke, TJ ;
Martins, LM ;
Basi, GS ;
Tung, JS ;
Earnshaw, WC ;
Leibson, PJ ;
Kaufmann, SH .
BLOOD, 1997, 90 (03) :935-943