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Mammalian caspases: structure ,a ctivation ,s ubstrates, and functions during apoptosis

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TLDR
Caspases, a family of cysteine-dependent aspartate-directed proteases, are prominent among the death proteases as discussed by the authors, and they play critical roles in initiation and execution of this process.
Abstract
■ Abstract Apoptosis is a genetically programmed, morphologically distinct form of cell death that can be triggered by a variety of physiological and pathological stimuli. Studies performed over the past 10 years have demonstrated that proteases play critical roles in initiation and execution of this process. The caspases, a family of cysteine-dependent aspartate-directed proteases, are prominent among the death proteases. Caspases are synthesized as relatively inactive zymogens that become activated by scaffold-mediated transactivation or by cleavage via upstream proteases in an intracellular cascade. Regulation of caspase activation and activity occurs at several different levels: ( a) Zymogen gene transcription is regulated; ( b) antiapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family and other cellular polypeptides block proximity-induced activation of certain procaspases; and ( c) certain cellular inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (cIAPs) can bind to and inhibit active caspases. Once activated, caspases cleave a variety of intracellular polypeptides, including major structural elements of the cytoplasm and nucleus, components of the DNA repair machinery, and a number of protein kinases. Collectively, these scissions disrupt survival pathways and disassemble important architectural components of the cell, contributing to the stereotypic morphological and biochemical changes that characterize apoptotic cell death.

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The biochemistry of apoptosis

TL;DR: The basic components of the death machinery are reviewed, how they interact to regulate apoptosis in a coordinated manner is described, and the main pathways that are used to activate cell death are discussed.
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Molecular mechanisms of caspase regulation during apoptosis

TL;DR: The present understanding of caspase regulation during apoptosis is described and biochemical and structural studies have led to important advances in understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms of cispase regulation.
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Mechanisms of Caspase Activation and Inhibition during Apoptosis

TL;DR: Current understanding of caspase regulation during apoptosis is presented and structural and biochemical studies on procaspases, IAPs, Smac/DIABLO, and apoptosome are reviewed.
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References
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Caspase-2 Can Trigger Cytochrome c Release and Apoptosis from the Nucleus

TL;DR: Data indicate the existence of a nuclear/mitochondrial apoptotic pathway elicited by caspase-2, and it is shown that in an early phase of apoptosis caspases can trigger mitochondrial dysfunction from the nucleus without relocalizing into the cytoplasm.
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Activation of Specific Apoptotic Caspases with an Engineered Small Molecule-Activated Protease

TL;DR: A model of proteolytic reciprocal negative regulation with mechanistic implications for the combined clinical use of proteasome inhibitors and proapoptotic drugs is proposed.
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Activation of ERK1/2, JNK and PKB by hydrogen peroxide in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells: role of ERK1/2 in H2O2-induced cell death

TL;DR: Investigation of the effect of H( 2)O(2) on extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), p38 mitogen-activated protein Kinase (p38 MAPK) and protein kinase B (PKB) activation in undifferentiated and differentiated SH-SY5Y cells has shown that H(2).
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Cytochrome c-dependent and -independent Induction of Apoptosis in Multiple Myeloma Cells

TL;DR: The findings suggest that Dex or anti-Fas mAb-induced apoptosis is not accompanied by cyto-c release and that there are at least two different pathways leading to activation of caspases and induction of apoptosis in multiple myeloma cells that can be distinguished by accumulation of cytosolic cy to-c.
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The role of the bcl-2/ced-9 gene family in cancer and general implications of defects in cell death control for tumourigenesis and resistance to chemotherapy

TL;DR: The role of the bcl-2/ced-9 gene family in cancer is described and the general implications of defects in the apoptosis program for tumourigenesis and resistance of cancer cells to chemotherapy are discussed in light of current knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of cell death.
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