Role for ceramide as an endogenous mediator of Fas-induced cytotoxicity.

Clifford G. Tepper(Duke Medical Center), Supriya Jayadev(Duke Medical Center), Bin Liu(Duke Medical Center), Alicja Bielawska(Duke Medical Center), Robert A. Wolff(Duke Medical Center), Shin Yonehara(Duke Medical Center), Yusuf A. Hannun(Duke Medical Center), Michael F. Seldin(Duke Medical Center)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 29, 1995
Cited by 323Open Access

Abstract

Triggering of the Fas/APO-1 cell-surface receptor induces apoptosis through an uncharacterized chain of events. Exposure of Fas-sensitive cells to an agonist monoclonal antibody induced cell death and a 200-300% elevation in endogenous levels of the sphingolipid ceramide, a proposed intracellular mediator of apoptosis. In contrast, similar treatment of Fas-resistant cells caused insignificant changes in ceramide levels. Because resistant cell lines expressed the Fas antigen, these results indicate that these cells have a defect in the proximal signaling events leading to ceramide generation. Exposure of the resistant cell lines to a synthetic analog of ceramide induced apoptosis, thus bypassing Fas resistance and indicating that the signaling pathways downstream of ceramide were intact. Furthermore, activation of protein kinase C with the diacylglycerol analog phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate significantly reduced Fas-induced cytotoxicity, suggesting opposing roles for ceramide and protein kinase C in regulation of apoptosis. These results provide evidence for ceramide as a necessary and sufficient lipid mediator of Fas-mediated apoptosis and suggest this process may be modulated via activation of additional signal-transduction pathways.


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