Barkett M, Dooher JE, Lemonnier L, Simmons L, Scarpati JN, Wang Y, Gilmore TD. Three mutations in v-Rel render it resistant to cleavage by cell-death protease caspase-3.
BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA 2001;
1526:25-36. [PMID:
11287119 DOI:
10.1016/s0304-4165(01)00092-7]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 19] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/21/2022]
Abstract
The retroviral oncoprotein v-Rel is a transcriptional activator in the Rel/NF-kappa B family. v-Rel causes rapidly fatal lymphomas in young chickens, and transforms and immortalizes chicken lymphoid cells in vitro. Several mutations that have enhanced the oncogenicity of v-Rel have been selected during in vitro and in vivo passage of v-Rel-containing retroviruses. In this report, we show that the C-terminal deletion and two point mutations (Asp-->Gly at residue 91 and Asp-->Asn at residue 437) in v-Rel make it resistant to cleavage by the cell-death protease caspase-3. In contrast, c-Rel, which has Asp residues at these sites, can be cleaved by caspase-3 in vitro as well as in vivo in cells induced to undergo apoptosis. We have characterized activities of v-Rel mutants with recreated single caspase-3 cleavage sites, two cleavage sites, or an introduced artificial cleavage site. All of these mutant v-Rel proteins are sensitive to caspase-3 cleavage in vitro, and show wild-type activity in terms of nuclear localization in chicken fibroblasts and DNA binding in vitro. Moreover, all caspase-3-sensitive v-Rel mutants transform chicken spleen cells in vitro and induce fatal lymphoid tumors in vivo to approximately the same extent as wild-type v-Rel. As with v-Rel mutants, caspase-3-resistant c-Rel mutants behave similarly to caspase-3-sensitive wild-type c-Rel in terms of DNA binding, transcriptional activation, in vitro transformation, and tumorigenicity. Mammalian c-Rel proteins can also be cleaved by caspase-3 in vitro, and a c-Rel mutant from a human pre-T lymphoma cell line is less sensitive than wild-type human c-Rel to cleavage by caspase-3. Taken together, these results demonstrate that specific mutations render oncogenic forms of Rel proteins resistant to cleavage by a cell-death caspase; however, the biological relevance of this resistance remains unclear. Nevertheless, to our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of mutations in caspase-3 recognition sites occurring during the evolution of an oncogenic protein.
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