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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

BMP-4 and retinoic acid synergistically induce activation of caspase-9 and cause apoptosis of P19 embryonal carcinoma cells cultured as a monolayer.

In monolayer cultures of P19 EC cells treated with both all-trans retinoic acid (RA) and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-4 (RA/BMP-4 treatment), many non-adherent apoptotic cells and activated caspase-3-positive cells were observed, but they were not observed in cells treated with RA or BMP-4 alone. Consistent with the appearance of activated caspase-3-positive cells, BMP-4 and RA together induced processing of caspase-9, Ac-DEVD-MCA cleavage activity and DNA fragmentation. These three activities were observed infrequently or not at all when cells were treated with RA or BMP-4 alone. In the RA/BMP-4 treatment-induced apoptosis, caspase-9 was upstream of caspase-3 in the enzyme cascade, and the caspase-9 to -3 step was key in the apoptotic pathway. Bcl-xL inhibited processing of caspase-9, Ac-DEVD-MCA cleavage activity and DNA fragmentation induced by RA/BMP-4 treatment. However, unlike staurosporine-induced apoptosis, cytochrome c, which activates caspase-9, was not detected in the cytosol of RA/BMP-4-treated cells. RA and BMP-4 may activate caspase-9 through an apoptotic pathway other than the Apaf-1/cytochrome c pathway. The prominent decrease of X-chromosome-linked inhibitory apoptosis protein (XIAP) in the cytosol may explain the activation of caspase-9 induced by RA and BMP-4 treatment.[1]

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