Return to search

RECIPROCAL REGULATION OF PAR-4 AND CASPASE-8 IN THE TRAIL SIGNALING PATHWAY

Par‐4 is a pro‐apoptotic tumor suppressor that is mutated, suppressed or inactivated in cancer. Par‐4 exploits components of the extrinsic pathway to cause apoptosis selectively of cancer cells. This study identified Par‐4 as an essential component of the apoptotic pathway induced by TRAIL, which selectively targets cancer cells. RNA interference‐mediated knockdown of Par‐4 rendered cancer cells unresponsive to TRAIL‐induced apoptosis. Cells with knocked‐down levels of Par‐4 were deficient in the activation of the apoptosis‐initiator caspase‐8 and the apoptosis‐effector caspase‐3 in response to TRAIL. Par‐4 was identified as a critical mediator of membrane translocation of caspase‐8 and the adapter protein FADD. Surprisingly, Par‐4 was also found to interact with caspase 8 in untreated cells, and was cleaved at the N‐terminus at aspartic acid residue 123 in response to TRAIL. This, along with another cleavage by caspase‐9 effectively generated a fragment containing the functional module of Par‐4, the SAC domain, which is sufficient for apoptosis of cancer cells. Moreover, TRAIL activated caspase‐8 was also found to be involved in nuclear translocation of Par‐4, a crucial step during apoptosis induction by Par‐4. Together, our findings suggest that Par‐ 4 is an essential downstream target of caspase‐8 that is activated by TRAIL signaling and that, in turn, activates caspase‐8 and the downstream apoptotic pathway in response to TRAIL.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uky.edu/oai:uknowledge.uky.edu:gradschool_diss-1673
Date01 January 2008
CreatorsRanganathan, Padhma
PublisherUKnowledge
Source SetsUniversity of Kentucky
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceUniversity of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations

Page generated in 0.0078 seconds