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Erratum Free access | 10.1172/JCI5457E1

Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and mitochondrial changes during CD95- and DNA damage–induced apoptosis

Annemiek D. Tepper, Evert de Vries, Wim J. van Blitterswijk, and Jannie Borst

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Published May 1, 1999 - More info

Published in Volume 103, Issue 9 on May 1, 1999
J Clin Invest. 1999;103(9):1363–1363. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI5457E1.
© 1999 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published May 1, 1999 - Version history
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Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and mitochondrial changes during CD95- and DNA damage–induced apoptosis
Annemiek D. Tepper, … , Wim J. van Blitterswijk, Jannie Borst
Annemiek D. Tepper, … , Wim J. van Blitterswijk, Jannie Borst
Article

Ordering of ceramide formation, caspase activation, and mitochondrial changes during CD95- and DNA damage–induced apoptosis

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Abstract

To evaluate the role of ceramide (Cer) in apoptosis signaling, we examined Cer formation induced by CD95, etoposide, or γ-radiation (IR) in relation to caspase activation and mitochondrial changes in Jurkat T cells. The Cer response to all three stimuli was mapped in between caspases sensitive to benzoyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethylketone (zVAD-fmk) and acetyl-DEVD-aldehyde (DEVD-CHO). Cer production was independent of nuclear fragmentation but associated with the occurrence of other aspects of the apoptotic morphology. Caspase-8 inhibition abrogated Cer formation and apoptosis induced by CD95 but did not affect the response to etoposide or IR, placing CD95-induced Cer formation downstream from caspase-8 and excluding a role for caspase-8 in the DNA damage pathways. CD95 signaling to the mitochondria required caspase-8, whereas cytochrome c release in response to DNA damage was caspase-independent. These results indicate that the caspases required for the Cer response to etoposide and IR reside at or downstream from the mitochondria. Bcl-2 overexpression abrogated the Cer response to etoposide and IR and reduced CD95-induced Cer accumulation. We conclude that the Cer response to DNA damage fully depends on mitochondrion-dependent caspases, whereas the response to CD95 partially relies on these caspases. Our data imply that Cer is not instrumental in the activation of inducer caspases or signaling to the mitochondria. Rather, Cer formation is associated with the execution phase of apoptosis.

Authors

Annemiek D. Tepper, Evert de Vries, Wim J. van Blitterswijk, Jannie Borst

×

J. Clin. Invest.103:971–978 (1999)

During the production process, the word caspase was misspelled in the title; the correct title appears above. Also, in the legend for Table 1 the mu symbol (μ) was formatted incorrectly; the correct legend appears below. We regret the error.

Table 1

Jurkat cells (J16) were preincubated for 2 h with zVAD-fmk (50 μM), DEVD-CHO (100 μM) or left untreated and then exposed to etoposide (10 μg/ml) or IR (30 Gy). After 16 h incubation, Cer content, nuclear fragmentation, mitochondrial transmembrane potential and cell viability were determined in parallel samples as described in the Methods section. The results are representative of two independent experiments.

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