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RGD peptides induce apoptosis by direct caspase-3 activation

Author

Listed:
  • Christopher D. Buckley

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • Darrell Pilling

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • Nick V. Henriquez

    (Institute for Cancer Studies, MRC Centre for Immune Regulation, The University of Birmingham)

  • Greg Parsonage

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • Katy Threlfall

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • Dagmar Scheel-Toellner

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • David L. Simmons

    (SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals, New Frontiers Science Park)

  • Arne N. Akbar

    (Royal Free and University College Medical School)

  • Janet M. Lord

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

  • Mike Salmon

    (Division of Immunity and Infection)

Abstract

Synthetic peptides containing the arginine–glycine–aspartate (RGD) motif have been used extensively as inhibitors of integrin–ligand interactions in studies of cell adhesion, migration, growth and differentiation1,2,3, because the RGD motif is an integrin-recognition motif found in many ligands. Here we report that RGD-containing peptides are able to directly induce apoptosis without any requirement for integrin-mediated cell clustering or signals. We show that RGD-containing peptides enter cells and directly induce autoprocessing and enzymatic activity of pro-caspase-3, a pro-apoptotic protein. Using the breast carcinoma cell line MCF-7, which has a functional deletion of the caspase-3 gene, we confirm that caspase-3 is required for RGD-mediated cell death. In addition to an RGD motif, pro-caspase-3 also contains a potential RGD-binding motif, aspartate–aspartate–methionine (DDM)4, near the site of processing to produce the p12 and p17 subunits5. On the basis of the ability of RGD–DDX interactions to trigger integrin activation6, we suggest that RGD peptides induce apoptosis by triggering conformational changes that promote pro-caspase-3 autoprocessing and activation. These findings provide an alternative molecular explanation for the potent pro-apoptotic properties of RGD peptides in models of angiogenesis, inflammation and cancer metastasis7,8,9.

Suggested Citation

  • Christopher D. Buckley & Darrell Pilling & Nick V. Henriquez & Greg Parsonage & Katy Threlfall & Dagmar Scheel-Toellner & David L. Simmons & Arne N. Akbar & Janet M. Lord & Mike Salmon, 1999. "RGD peptides induce apoptosis by direct caspase-3 activation," Nature, Nature, vol. 397(6719), pages 534-539, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:397:y:1999:i:6719:d:10.1038_17409
    DOI: 10.1038/17409
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