Enhanced sensitivity to cytochrome c-induced apoptosis mediated by PHAPI in breast cancer cells

2006 
Apoptotic signaling defects both promote tumorigenesis and confound chemotherapy. Typically, chemotherapeutics stimulate cytochrome c release to the cytoplasm, thereby activating the apoptosome. Although cancer cells can be refractory to cytochrome c release, many malignant cells also exhibit defects in cytochrome c –induced apoptosome activation, further promoting chemotherapeutic resistance. We have found that breast cancer cells display an unusual sensitivity to cytochrome c –induced apoptosis when compared with their normal counterparts. This sensitivity, not observed in other cancers, resulted from enhanced recruitment of caspase-9 to the Apaf-1 caspase recruitment domain. Augmented caspase activation was mediated by PHAPI, which is overexpressed in breast cancers. Furthermore, cytochrome c microinjection into mammary epithelial cells preferentially killed malignant cells, suggesting that this phenomenon might be exploited for chemotherapeutic purposes. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(4): 2210-8)
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