Apoptosis is a form of programmed cell death that occurs under numerous developmental and physiological conditions in order to eliminate unwanted or damaged cells from organisms. The activation of apoptosis has important implications in a variety of diseases, including cancer, AIDS, and autoimmune diseases. 1) We are studying the catabolic effectors that carry out the apoptotic process and degrade DNA, RNA, and protein during programmed death or apoptosis. We have identified and characterized one nuclease, cyclophilin, as well as several other candidate enzymes which are now being purified. We have also shown that 28S ribosomal RNA is specifically degraded during apoptosis. This appears to be activated via the degradation of the ribosomal P3 protein. 2) Apoptosis is activated by many different signals operating through a diverse array of signal transduction pathways. Thus we have sought to define common activation pathways for apoptosis that are independent of both the apoptotic signal and cell type. We have shown that cell shrinkage must occur for the subsequent DNA fragmentation. These findings have directed our efforts to understand how cells regulate their volume and what ion fluxes occur during apoptosis. This is likely to be important in further deciphering mechanisms of apoptosis. 3) A third effort has been in the area of genetic approaches to define components of the cell death pathway. Somatic cell fusion studies show that the apoptotic phenotype is recessive and now developed a powerful selection screen using expression cloning to identify novel repressors of apoptosis. We are also identifying more genetically tractable systems to study apoptosis and now have data that indicates that apoptosis occurs in yeast. 4) We have also been deciphering the interplay between inhibition of cell growth and induction of apoptosis.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01ES090079-01
Application #
2456763
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (LCMP)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1996
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Muñoz-Llanos, Mauricio; García-Pérez, María A; Xu, Xiaojiang et al. (2018) MicroRNA Profiling and Bioinformatics Target Analysis in Dorsal Hippocampus of Chronically Stressed Rats: Relevance to Depression Pathophysiology. Front Mol Neurosci 11:251
Franco, Rodrigo; Bortner, Carl D; Schmitz, Ingo et al. (2014) Glutathione depletion regulates both extrinsic and intrinsic apoptotic signaling cascades independent from multidrug resistance protein 1. Apoptosis 19:117-34
Franco, Rodrigo; Cidlowski, John A (2012) Glutathione efflux and cell death. Antioxid Redox Signal 17:1694-713
Franco, R; Cidlowski, J A (2009) Apoptosis and glutathione: beyond an antioxidant. Cell Death Differ 16:1303-14
Franco, Rodrigo; Panayiotidis, Mihalis I; Cidlowski, John A (2007) Glutathione depletion is necessary for apoptosis in lymphoid cells independent of reactive oxygen species formation. J Biol Chem 282:30452-65
Bortner, Carl D; Cidlowski, John A (2007) Cell shrinkage and monovalent cation fluxes: role in apoptosis. Arch Biochem Biophys 462:176-88
Scoltock, A B; Heimlich, G; Cidlowski, J A (2007) Glucocorticoids inhibit the apoptotic actions of UV-C but not Fas ligand in hepatoma cells: direct evidence for a critical role of Bcl-xL. Cell Death Differ 14:840-50
Tliba, Omar; Cidlowski, John A; Amrani, Yassine (2006) CD38 expression is insensitive to steroid action in cells treated with tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma by a mechanism involving the up-regulation of the glucocorticoid receptor beta isoform. Mol Pharmacol 69:588-96
Lu, Nick Z; Cidlowski, John A (2006) Glucocorticoid receptor isoforms generate transcription specificity. Trends Cell Biol 16:301-7
Lewis-Tuffin, Laura J; Cidlowski, John A (2006) The physiology of human glucocorticoid receptor beta (hGRbeta) and glucocorticoid resistance. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1069:1-9

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