Requirement for GD3 ganglioside in CD95-and ceramide-induced apoptosis

R De Maria, L Lenti, F Malisan, F d'Agostino… - Science, 1997 - science.org
R De Maria, L Lenti, F Malisan, F d'Agostino, B Tomassini, A Zeuner, MR Rippo, R Testi
Science, 1997science.org
Gangliosides participate in development and tissue differentiation. Cross-linking of the
apoptosis-inducing CD95 protein (also called Fas or APO-1) in lymphoid and myeloid tumor
cells triggered GD3 ganglioside synthesis and transient accumulation. CD95-induced GD3
accumulation depended on integral receptor “death domains” and on activation of a family of
cysteine proteases called caspases. Cell-permeating ceramides, which are potent inducers
of apoptosis, also triggered GD3 synthesis. GD3 disrupted mitochondrial transmembrane …
Gangliosides participate in development and tissue differentiation. Cross-linking of the apoptosis-inducing CD95 protein (also called Fas or APO-1) in lymphoid and myeloid tumor cells triggered GD3 ganglioside synthesis and transient accumulation. CD95-induced GD3 accumulation depended on integral receptor “death domains” and on activation of a family of cysteine proteases called caspases. Cell-permeating ceramides, which are potent inducers of apoptosis, also triggered GD3 synthesis. GD3 disrupted mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨm), and induced apoptosis, in a caspase-independent fashion. Transient overexpression of the GD3 synthase gene directly triggered apoptosis. Pharmacological inhibition of GD3 synthesis and exposure to GD3 synthase antisense oligodeoxynucleotides prevented CD95-induced apoptosis. Thus, GD3 ganglioside mediates the propagation of CD95-generated apoptotic signals in hematopoietic cells.
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