Sensitivity to Fas-Mediated Apoptosis Is Determined Below Receptor Level in Human Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells

Author:

Chan Shiu-Wan1,Hegyi Laszlo1,Scott Stephen1,Cary Nathaniel R. B.1,Weissberg Peter L.1,Bennett Martin R.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Unit of Cardiovascular Medicine (S.-W.C., L.H., S.S., P.L.W., M.R.B.), Addenbrooke’s Centre for Clinical Investigation, Addenbrooke’s Hospital; and Department of Histopathology (N.R.B.C.), Papworth Hospital, Papworth Everard, Cambridge, UK.

Abstract

Abstract —Despite Fas expression, many cells resist Fas-induced apoptosis. Although differences in surface Fas expression can explain Fas resistance, multiple proteins below receptor level also inhibit Fas-induced apoptosis. To examine the mechanism of Fas resistance, we studied Fas-induced apoptosis in human medial vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) from healthy coronary arteries. VSMCs showed marked heterogeneity to Fas-induced apoptosis, exhibiting both Fas-resistant (98.1±2.3% viable, n=4, P =NS) and Fas-sensitive (31.3±2.6% viable, n=3, P <0.01) cells. Fas-resistant VSMCs expressed surface Fas and could recruit RIP, indicating that functional receptor complexes were formed. However, Fas-resistant cells showed reduced expression of FADD, Fas ligand, and caspases 3, 7, and 8 and increased expression of FLIP and c-IAP-1. Fas-induced apoptosis was associated with cleavage of caspase 3 and blocked by inhibitors of caspase 3 or 8 but not caspase 1, 6, or 7. Selective inhibition of caspase 3 or 8 by antisense transfection inhibited Fas-induced apoptosis, but their reexpression could not rescue the Fas-resistant phenotype. In vivo, medial VSMCs showed marked heterogeneity of expression of caspase 3. We conclude that Fas sensitivity is determined not only by expression of surface Fas but by differential expression of Fas-signaling proteins below receptor level. Subpopulations of cells within the same tissue have different sensitivities to apoptosis, determined by expression of specific death-signaling proteins.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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