Cross-talk between two cysteine protease families: activation of caspase-12 by calpain in apoptosis

T Nakagawa, J Yuan - The Journal of cell biology, 2000 - rupress.org
T Nakagawa, J Yuan
The Journal of cell biology, 2000rupress.org
Calpains and caspases are two cysteine protease families that play important roles in
regulating pathological cell death. Here, we report that m-calpain may be responsible for
cleaving procaspase-12, a caspase localized in the ER, to generate active caspase-12. In
addition, calpain may be responsible for cleaving the loop region in Bcl-xL and, therefore,
turning an antiapoptotic molecule into a proapoptotic molecule. We propose that disturbance
to intracellular calcium storage as a result of ischemic injury or amyloid β peptide cytotoxicity …
Calpains and caspases are two cysteine protease families that play important roles in regulating pathological cell death. Here, we report that m-calpain may be responsible for cleaving procaspase-12, a caspase localized in the ER, to generate active caspase-12. In addition, calpain may be responsible for cleaving the loop region in Bcl-xL and, therefore, turning an antiapoptotic molecule into a proapoptotic molecule. We propose that disturbance to intracellular calcium storage as a result of ischemic injury or amyloid β peptide cytotoxicity may induce apoptosis through calpain- mediated caspase-12 activation and Bcl-xL inactivation. These data suggest a novel apoptotic pathway involving calcium-mediated calpain activation and cross-talks between calpain and caspase families.
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