Abstract
Survivin is an oncogenic protein involved in cell division and acts as an anti-apoptotic factor. It is highly expressed in most cancers and is associated with chemotherapy resistance, increased tumour recurrence, and shorter patient survival. This makes anti-survivin therapy an attractive cancer treatment strategy. These functions are mediated by several survivin spliced variants, whose expression may correlate with cancer progression. One of the spliced variants, survivin-ΔEx3, is known to inhibit apoptosis, through undefined mechanisms. Here, we characterised these mechanisms upon TNFα-mediated apoptosis, and showed that survivin-ΔEx3 acts as an adaptor, allowing the formation of a complex between Bcl-2 and activated caspase-3. The Bcl-2/survivin-ΔEx3 complex, but not survivin-ΔEx3 itself, inhibits the activity of caspase-3. Bcl-2 is therefore linked to the postmitochondrial apoptotic machinery by survivin-ΔEx3. Thus, survivin-ΔEx3 plays a key role in the inhibition of caspase-3 activity, and in the control of the mitochondrial checkpoint of apoptosis. This study suggests that targeting survivin-ΔEx3, rather than survivin alone, could be relevant for treating human cancers. © 2007 Cancer Research.
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Malcles, M. H., Wang, H. W., Koumi, A., Tsai, Y. H., Yu, M., Godfrey, A., & Boshoff, C. (2007). Characterisation of the anti-apoptotic function of survivin-ΔEx3 during TNFα-mediated cell death. British Journal of Cancer, 96(11), 1659–1666. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603768
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