Non-apoptotic functions of caspases in cellular proliferation and differentiation |
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Authors: | Schwerk Christian Schulze-Osthoff Klaus |
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Institution: | Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Düsseldorf, Building 23.12, Universit?tsstr. 1, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany. |
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Abstract: | The cysteinyl aspartate-specific proteases (caspases) have been identified as key players in the cellular process termed programmed cell death or apoptosis. During apoptosis, activated apoptotic caspases cleave selected target proteins to execute cell death. Additionally to their established function in cell death, a variety of recent publications have provided increasing evidence that apoptotic caspases also participate in several non-apoptotic cellular processes. Activated caspases exhibit functions during T-cell proliferation and cell cycle regulation, but are also involved in the differentiation of a diverse array of cell types. In some cell types, their differentiation can be morphologically viewed as a kind of incomplete apoptosis. Analysis of well-known apoptotic targets of caspases implicates that the cleavage of a limited number of selected substrates plays a major role during non-apoptotic functions of caspases. Selective substrate cleavage might be regulated by activation of anti-apoptotic factors, via a compartmentalized activation of caspases, or through limited activity of caspases during apoptosis-independent functions. The increasing evidence for caspase function in non-apoptotic cellular events suggests that caspases play a much more diverse role than previously assumed. |
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Keywords: | FADD Fas-associating protein with death domain PARP poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase |
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