2 research outputs found

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

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