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Signaling Through the TRAIL Receptor DR5/FADD Pathway Plays a Role in the Apoptosis Associated With Skeletal Myoblast Differentiation

  • J. O'Flaherty
  • , Y. Mei
  • , M. Freer
  • Cleveland State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Apoptosis rather than differentiation is a physiological process during myogenesis and muscle regeneration. When cultured myoblasts were induced to differentiate, we detected an increase in caspase 8 activity. Pharmacological inhibition of caspase 8 activity decreased apoptosis. Expression of a dominant-negative mutant of the adapter protein FADD also abrogated apoptosis, implicating a death ligand pathway. Treatment with TRAIL, but not Fas, induced apoptosis in these myoblasts. Accordingly, treatment with a soluble TRAIL decoy receptor or expression of a dominant-negative mutant of the TRAIL receptor DR5 abrogated apoptosis. While TRAIL expression levels remained unaltered in apoptotic myoblasts, DR5 expression levels increased. Finally, we also detected a reduction in FLIP, a death-receptor effector protein and caspase 8 competitive inhibitor, to undetectable levels in apoptotic myoblasts. Thus, our data demonstrate an important role for the TRAIL/DR5/FADD/caspase 8 pathway in the apoptosis associated with skeletal myoblast differentiation. Identifying the functional apoptotic pathways in skeletal myoblasts may prove useful in minimizing the myoblast apoptosis that contributes pathologically to a variety of diseases and in minimizing the apoptosis of transplanted myoblasts to treat these and other disease states. © 2006 Springer Science + Business Media, LLC.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalApoptosis
Volume11
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2006
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Apoptosis
  • DR5
  • FADD
  • FLIP
  • Myoblast

Disciplines

  • Biology

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