In situ trapping of activated initiator caspases reveals a role for caspase-2 in heat shock-induced

Author:  ["Shine Tu","Gavin P. McStay","Louis-Martin Boucher","Tak Mak","Helen M. Beere","Douglas R. Green"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:  general   CellBiology   CancerResearch   DevelopmentalBiology   StemCells   Biological

Abstract

Activation of 'initiator' (or 'apical') caspases-2, -8 or -9 (refs 1–3) is crucial for induction of apoptosis. These caspases function to activate executioner caspapses that, in turn, orchestrate apoptotic cell death. Here, we show that a cell-permeable, biotinylated pan-caspase inhibitor (bVAD–fmk) both inhibited and 'trapped' the apical caspase activated when apoptosis was triggered. As expected, only caspase-8 was trapped in response to ligation of death receptors, whereas only caspase-9 was trapped in response to a variety of other apoptosis-inducing agents. Caspase-2 was exclusively activated in heat shock-induced apoptosis. This activation of caspase-2 was also observed in cells protected from heat-shock-induced apoptosis by Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL. Reduced sensitivity to heat-shock-induced death was observed in caspase-2−/− cells. Furthermore, cells lacking the adapter molecule RAIDD failed to activate caspase-2 after heat shock treatment and showed resistance to apoptosis in this setting. This approach unambiguously identifies the apical caspase activated in response to apoptotic stimuli, and establishes caspase-2 as a proximal mediator of heat shock-induced apoptosis.

Cite this article

Tu, S., McStay, G., Boucher, LM. et al. In situ trapping of activated initiator caspases reveals a role for caspase-2 in heat shock-induced apoptosis. Nat Cell Biol 8, 72–77 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb1340

View full text

>> Full Text:   In situ trapping of activated initiator caspases reveals a role for caspase-2 in heat shock-induced

GCP-WD is a γ-tubulin targeting factor required for centrosomal and chromatin-mediated microtubule n

PCNA functions as a molecular platform to trigger Cdt1 destruction and prevent re-replication