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The cleavage of Akt/protein kinase B by death receptor signaling is an important event in detachment-induced apoptosis

Robin E. Bachelder, Harvard Medical School
Melissa A. Wendt, Harvard Medical School
Naoya Fujita, University of Tokyo
Takashi Tsuruo, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research
Arthur M. Mercurio, University of Massachusetts Medical School

Abstract

Epithelial cells undergo death receptor-dependent apoptosis when detached from matrix, a process termed anoikis. Activation of Akt/protein kinase B (PKB) by matrix attachment protects cells from anoikis. In this study, we establish a link between anoikis and Akt/PKB-mediated survival by demonstrating that Akt/PKB is cleaved by caspases in matrix-detached epithelial cells by a mechanism that involves death receptors. Reduced levels of Akt/PKB protein were observed in detached Madin-Darby canine kidney cells relative to cells attached to collagen. Equivalent levels of Akt/PKB, however, were detected in matrix-adherent and detached cells after inhibition of caspase activity or expression of an Akt/PKB mutant (D108+119A) that is resistant to caspase cleavage. The contribution of death domain-containing proteins to Akt/PKB cleavage was evidenced by the ability of dominant negative Fas-associated death domain to restore normal levels of Akt/PKB in matrix-detached cells. Importantly, expression of a cleavage-resistant Akt/PKB mutant protected matrix-detached cells from apoptosis. These studies suggest that members of the death receptor family promote the caspase-mediated cleavage of Akt/PKB and that this event contributes to anoikis.

Suggested Citation

Robin E. Bachelder, Melissa A. Wendt, Naoya Fujita, Takashi Tsuruo, and Arthur M. Mercurio. "The cleavage of Akt/protein kinase B by death receptor signaling is an important event in detachment-induced apoptosis" The Journal of biological chemistry 276.37 (2001).
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/arthur_mercurio/1