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Vascular and Cardiac Disease, Therapeutics, Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Vascular remodeling in atherogenesis is marked
not only by cellular proliferation and migration but is also impacted
by apoptotic cell death. Extensive studies have focused on the signal
transduction events leading to apoptosis. CPP32, a member of the
caspase/interleukin-1
-converting enzyme (ICE) protease family, has
emerged as a central player in several reports of apoptosis pathways.
Vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) undergo apoptosis after treatment
with various stimuli, including nitric oxide (NO) donors, such as
sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 0.1-1 mM). The aim of the present study
was to evaluate the role of CPP32 in SNP-induced apoptosis of SMC. We
isolated a rabbit CPP32 cDNA by using degenerate primers and polymerase chain reaction technique. The predicted protein encoded by this cDNA
contains the conserved sequence (QACRG) necessary for covalent linkage
to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) as well as the three amino acids
responsible for substrate recognition and catalysis reported in other
caspase members. Using a segment of this cDNA as a probe, we found no
change of CPP32 mRNA in cultured arterial SMC before and after SNP
treatment. We also measured the protease activity of CPP32 against a
chromophore p-nitroaniline
(pNA)-labeled substrate, DEVD-pNA. Our results showed a dose-dependent
increase of CPP32 activity in SMC, with a maximal 10-fold increase
after SNP treatment. Addition of a competitive CPP32 inhibitor,
DEVD-CHO, produced a 50% reduction in maximal stimulation. Immunoblot
analysis illustrated that SNP treatment induced proteolytic cleavage of CPP32 into its enzymatically active subunit p17 as well as the degradation of PARP into a 85-kDa fragment. We further demonstrated that incubation of cultured SMC with DEVD-CHO significantly reduced SNP-induced DNA fragmentation. DNA fragmentation analysis was carried
out using several methods including a cell death detection enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit, in situ end labeling, and DNA
electrophoresis in agarose gel. Our data indicate that CPP32 mRNA is
constitutively expressed in rabbit SMC and activation of CPP32 protein
has a pivotal role in SNP-induced SMC apoptosis.
caspase; cysteine proteinase; poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; cDNA
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