Identification of phosphorylated p38 as a novel DAPK-interacting partner during TNFα-induced apoptosis in colorectal tumor cells

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Abstract

Death-associated protein kinase (DAPK) is a serine/threonine kinase that contributes to pro-apoptotic signaling on cytokine exposure. The role of DAPK in macrophage-associated tumor cell death is currently unknown. Recently, we suggested a new function for DAPK in the induction of apoptosis during the interaction between colorectal tumor cells and tumor-associated macrophages. Using a cell-culture model with conditioned supernatants of differentiated/ activated macrophages (U937) and human HCT116 colorectal tumor cells, we replicated DAPK-associated tumor cell death; this model likely reflects the in vivo tumor setting. In this study, we show that tumor necrosis factor-α exposure under conditions of macrophage activation induced DAPK-dependent apoptosis in the colorectal tumor cell line HCT116. Simultaneously, early phosphorylation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (phospho-p38) was observed. We identified the phospho-p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase as a novel interacting protein of DAPK in tumor necrosis factor-α-induced apoptosis. The general relevance of this interaction was verified in two colorectal cell lines without functional p53 (ie, HCT116 p53-/- and HT29 mutant) and in human colon cancer and ulcerative colitis tissues. Supernatants of freshly isolated human macrophages were also able to induce DAPK and phospho-p38. Our findings highlight the mechanisms that underlie DAPK regulation in tumor cell death evoked by immune cells. Copyright © American Society for Investigative Pathology.

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Bajbouj, K., Poehlmann, A., Kuester, D., Drewes, T., Haase, K., Hartig, R., … Schneider-Stock, R. (2009). Identification of phosphorylated p38 as a novel DAPK-interacting partner during TNFα-induced apoptosis in colorectal tumor cells. American Journal of Pathology, 175(2), 557–570. https://doi.org/10.2353/ajpath.2009.080853

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