Abstract
Expression of the 243-residue form of the adenovirus E1A protein in the absence of other viral proteins triggers apoptosis by a pathway that requires p53. This pathway includes processing and activation of initiator procaspase- 8, redistribution of cytochrome c, and activation of procaspase-3. Bcl-2 functions at or upstream of procaspase-8 processing to inhibit all of these events and prevent cell death. This contrasts with the antiapoptotic influence of Bcl-2 family proteins in the cell death pathway induced by Fas ligand or tumor necrosis factor (TNF), in which Bcl-2 typically acts downstream of Fas/TNFR1-mediated activation of caspase-8. Moreover, E1A induces procaspase-8 processing and cell death in cells deleted of FADD, an adaptor protein critical for Fas/TNFR1 activation of caspase-8. The results indicate that EIA is capable of activating caspase-8 by a Bcl-2-inhibitable pathway that does not involve autocrine stimulation of FADD-dependent death receptor pathways.
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CITATION STYLE
Nguyen, M., Branton, P. E., Roy, S., Nicholson, D. W., Alnemri, E. S., Yeh, W. C., … Shore, G. C. (1998). E1A-induced processing of procaspase-8 can occur independently of FADD and is inhibited by Bcl-2. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(50), 33099–33102. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.50.33099
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