4.7 Review

Can't live without them, can live with them: roles of caspases during vital cellular processes

Journal

APOPTOSIS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 980-995

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10495-009-0346-6

Keywords

Caspase; Terminal differentiation; Apoptosis; Nonapoptotic process; Apoptosis-like process; Proteolytic degeneration; Compartmentalized activity

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation
  2. Minerva foundation
  3. Federal German Ministry for Education and Research
  4. Israel Cancer Research Fund
  5. German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development
  6. Moross Institute for Cancer Research
  7. Lord Mitchell, The Henry S. & Anne S. Reich Research Fund for Mental Health
  8. The Samuel M. Soref & Helene K. Soref Foundation
  9. The Chais Family Fellows Program for New Scientists
  10. Israeli Ministry of Absorption in Science

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Since the pioneering discovery that the genetic cell death program in C. elegans is executed by the cysteine-aspartate protease (caspase) CED3, caspase activation has become nearly synonymous with apoptosis. A critical mass of data accumulated in the past few years, have clearly established that apoptotic caspases can also participate in a variety of non-apoptotic processes. The roles of caspases during these processes and the regulatory mechanisms that prevent unrestrained caspase activity remain to be fully investigated, and may vary in different cellular contexts. Significantly, some of these processes, such as terminal differentiation of vertebrate lens fiber cells and red blood cells, as well as spermatid terminal differentiation and dendritic pruning of sensory neurons in Drosophila, all involve proteolytic degradation of major cellular compartments, and are conceptually, molecularly, biochemically, and morphologically reminiscent of apoptosis. Moreover, some of these model systems bear added values for the study of caspase activation/apoptosis. For example, the Drosophila sperm differentiation is the only system known in invertebrate which absolutely requires the mitochondrial pathway (i.e. Cyt c). The existence of testis-specific genes for many of the components in the electron transport chain, including Cyt c, facilitates the use of the Drosophila sperm system to investigate possible roles of these otherwise essential proteins in caspase activation. Caspases are also involved in a wide range of other vital processes of non-degenerative nature, indicating that these proteases play much more diverse roles than previously assumed. In this essay, we review genetic, cytological, and molecular studies conducted in Drosophila, vertebrate, and cultured cells, which underlie the foundations of this newly emerging field.

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