Damaged microtubules can inactivate BCL-2 by means of the mTOR kinase

被引:43
作者
Calastretti, A
Bevilacqua, A
Ceriani, C
Viganò, S
Zancai, P
Capaccioli, S
Nicolin, A
机构
[1] Univ Milan, Dept Pharmacol, I-20129 Milan, Italy
[2] Ctr Riferimento Oncol, Div Expt Oncol, I-33081 Aviano, Italy
[3] Univ Florence, Inst Gen Pathol, Florence, Italy
关键词
apoptosis; BCL-2; mTOR; microtubules; p27; rapamycin;
D O I
10.1038/sj.onc.1204751
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Rapamycin, a specific inhibitor of the serine/threonine mTOR kinase, markedly inhibited both cell growth and apoptosis in human B-cell lines. Besides arresting cells in G(1) by increasing p27(kip1), rapamycin tripled the cellular level of the BCL-2 protein. The activity was dose-dependent and specific for the p27(kip1) and BCL-2 proteins. Rapamycin did not affect bcl-2 mRNA although it increased cellular BCL-2 concentration by inhibiting phosphorylation, a mechanism initiating the decay process. To add new insight, we combined rapamycin treatment with treatment by taxol, which, by damaging microtubules, can phosphorylate BCL-2 and activate apoptosis. It was found that the mTOR kinase was activated in cells treated with taxol or with nocodazole although it was inhibited in cells pre-treated with rapamycin. BCL-2 phosphorylation, apoptosis and hyperdiploidy were also inhibited by rapamycin. In contrast, taxol-induced microtubule stabilization or metaphase synchronization were not inhibited by rapamycin. Taken together, these findings indicate that mTOR belongs to the enzymatic cascade that, starting from damaged microtubules, phosphorylates BCL-2. By regulating apoptosis, in addition to the control of a multitude of growth-related pathways, mTOR plays a nodal role in signaling G(1) and G(2)-M events.
引用
收藏
页码:6172 / 6180
页数:9
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