Fas-associated Death Domain Protein Interleukin-1beta -converting Enzyme 2 (FLICE2), an ICE/Ced-3 Homologue, Is Proximally Involved in CD95- and p55-mediated Death Signaling*

(Received for publication, November 11, 1996, and in revised form, December 24, 1996)

Claudius Vincenz and Vishva M. Dixit Dagger

From the Department of Pathology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
Acknowledgments
Note added in proof
REFERENCES


ABSTRACT

The pivotal discovery that Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) interleukin-1beta -converting enzyme (FLICE)/MACH was recruited to the CD95 signaling complex by virtue of its ability to bind the adapter molecule FADD established that this protease has a role in initiating the death pathway (Boldin, M. P., Goncharov, T. M., Goltsev, Y. V., and Wallach, D. (1996) Cell 85, 803-815; Muzio, M., Chinnaiyan, A. M., Kischkel, K. C., O'Rourke, K., Shevchenko, A., Ni, J., Scaffidi, C., Bretz, J. D., Zhang, M., Gentz, R., Mann, M., Krammer, P. H., Peter, M. E., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) Cell 85, 817-827). In this report, we describe the cloning and characterization of a new member of the caspase family, a homologue of FLICE/MACH, and Mch4. Since the overall architecture and function of this molecule is similar to that of FLICE, it has been designated FLICE2. Importantly, the carboxyl-terminal half of the small catalytic subunit that includes amino acids predicted to be involved in substrate binding is distinct. We show that the pro-domain of FLICE2 encodes a functional death effector domain that binds to the corresponding domain in the adapter molecule FADD. Consistent with this finding, FLICE2 is recruited to both the CD95 and p55 tumor necrosis factor receptor signaling complexes in a FADD-dependent manner. A functional role for FLICE2 is suggested by the finding that an active site mutant of FLICE2 inhibits CD95 and tumor necrosis factor receptor-mediated apoptosis. FLICE2 is therefore involved in CD95 and p55 signal transduction.


INTRODUCTION

The conserved mechanisms of programmed cell death that play a fundamentally important role in tissue homeostasis, embryogenesis, and cellular defense mechanisms have only recently been subject to molecular analysis (1). Studies in Caenorhabditis elegans were important in providing a molecular framework for the cell death pathway. In particular, the discovery that the C. elegans death gene, Ced-3, possessed substantial homology to the mammalian interleukin-1beta -converting enzyme (ICE)1 was a major step forward (2). ICE is an unusual cysteine protease that processes pro-interleukin-1beta to the mature cytokine by cleaving after Asp residues. Subsequently, several mammalian Ced-3 homologues have been characterized that are unable to process pro-interleukin-1beta but cleave poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), a protein known to be proteolytically processed early in apoptosis. This and other evidence suggested that these related family members played a more prominent role in apoptosis. Recently, this family of cysteine, aspartate-specific proteases has been named the caspase family to denote cysteine, aspartate-specific proteases (3). Depending upon susceptibility to tetrapeptide inhibitors, this family of proteases can be divided into CPP32-like (DEVD-inhibitable) and ICE-like (YVAD-inhibitable) enzymes (4). Evidence is accumulating for the existence of a cascade of caspases that can potentially activate each other, thereby amplifying the death signal leading to precipitous cleavage of death substrates and rapid demise of the cell (5, 6). The caspases are activated by a number of physiological and pharmacological stimuli that induce apoptosis (7).

A number of intriguing questions remain, however, including the identity of the caspases that initiate the cascade, the mechanism of activation, and the exact sequence of events leading to activation of downstream effector caspases.

The identification of FLICE/MACH as a receptor-associated caspase like protease suggested a surprisingly direct mechanism for engagement of the death pathway by the death receptors CD95 and the p55 tumor necrosis factor 1 (8, 9). Upon activation, both these receptors use their death domains to bind the corresponding domain of adapter molecules. Therefore, the death domain appears to represent a protein-protein interaction motif. The death domain containing adapter molecule FADD plays a central role as a conduit for death signals from both the CD95 and p55 receptors (10). Dominant negative versions of FADD that lack the amino-terminal segment (yet retain the death domain) effectively attenuate both CD95- and p55-induced apoptosis (11, 12). Since the amino-terminal domain of FADD appeared necessary to engage the downstream components of the death pathway, it was dubbed the death effector domain (DED) (10). The importance of this domain was underlined by the discovery that a caspase (FLICE/MACH) possessed sequences homologous to the DED within its pro-domain. Biochemical and mutagenesis studies revealed that the DED of FADD, by virtue of its ability to bind to the corresponding sequence motif in the pro-domain, recruited FLICE/MACH to the receptor signaling complex (8). These studies for the first time suggested a homophilic binding mechanism involving DEDs that allowed the death receptors to physically engage the caspases through the adapter molecule FADD.

As part of our continuing effort to characterize additional members of the caspase family, we have identified a new member, designated FLICE2, that is a close structural homologue of FLICE and very similar to Mch4 with certain important exceptions. We demonstrate for the first time that FLICE2 is a Ced-3 homologue capable of interacting with both p55 and CD95 receptors through the adapter molecule FADD. Further, a catalytically inactive form of FLICE2 inhibited both p55- and CD95-induced apoptosis, suggesting that FLICE2 can be recruited to the receptor signaling complex and participate in the propagation of the death signal.


MATERIALS AND METHODS

Oligonucleotides

The following oligonucleotides were used: T96R, GAAAGATGACACAGGTACACG; pCDM8 5'F2, AATGTCGTAACAACTCCGCCCC; FL2R, CCTTTAGAGCACAATGGATCTCGAGGT; pCDM8 3', CACACCACAGAAGTAAGGTTCCTT; FL#2, ACAACCAGCAAGTCTTGAAGTCTC; T96stop, AAGCCTCTGGAAAGAACTAGGAAACGCTG.

Antibodies

A FLICE2 peptide, ISAQTPRPPMRRWS, that corresponds to amino acids 505-518 of the small catalytic subunit was used to immunize rabbits and obtain polyclonal antiserum.

Cloning of Human FLICE2

An EST clone (GenBank accession no. T96912[GenBank]) was identified as a new caspase family member. This clone contained a 1.5-kilobase insert encoding sequences corresponding to the carboxyl-terminal segment of caspases, stop codon, 3'-untranslated, and poly(A)-tail. Full-length sequence was obtained by two rounds of PCR using gene- and vector-specific primers. Initially, cDNA from a human K562 library was used as template, T96R as the gene-specific reverse primer, and pCDM8 5'F2 as the vector-specific forward primer. A second gene-specific reverse primer, FL2R, was designed, and an additional upstream sequence was obtained from a melanoma library employing FL2R as the gene-specific primer and pCDM8 3' as the vector-specific primer. Finally, a full-length clone was obtained by PCR with the two gene-specific primers FL#2 and T96stop using a thermostable proofreading polymerase (Clontech). The resulting PCR product was subcloned, sequenced, and used as template for other constructions.

Expression Vectors

All eukaryotic expression vectors were constructed in pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) by standard PCR techniques using custom-designed primers encoding epitope tags and appropriate restriction sites. FLICE2 harboring a His6 tag at its carboxyl terminus was constructed in the pET23b vector (Novagen).

Northern Blot Analysis

Human multiple tissue and human cancer cell line poly(A)+ RNA blots were obtained from Clontech. 293, 293EBNA, Jurkat, U937, MCF7, and THP1 RNA were purified using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen) following the manufacturer's instructions and analyzed by Northern blotting as described previously (13). The 32P-labeled FLICE2 probe encoded amino acids 229-269.

Granzyme B Activation and PARP Cleavage

His6-tagged FLICE2 was generated by coupled in vitro transcription/translation using the TNT kit (Promega). The translated protein was purified as described previously (14). In vitro activation of purified FLICE2 by granzyme B (gift from C. J. Froelich, Northwestern University Medical School) was performed essentially as described previously (14). Briefly, 0.3 pmol of granzyme B were used to cleave 50 nmol of FLICE2. The tetrapeptide aldehyde inhibitors, YVAD-CHO and DEVD-CHO (Bachem), were added at a final concentration of 1 µmol following incubation with granzyme B.

In Vitro Binding

[35S]Methionine-radiolabeled proteins obtained by coupled in vitro transcription/translation were incubated with bacterially expressed His6-tagged proteins immobilized onto Ni-NTA agarose beads. Binding reactions were performed as described previously (8). Fraction of input radiolabeled protein that bound to the beads was quantitated by phosphorimager analysis.

Co-immunoprecipitation and Western Blot Analysis

Transient transfections of 293 cells were performed as described previously (15). A CrmA expression construct was included to suppress apoptosis (Fig. 2, D and E). Cells were harvested 40 h following transfection, precleared, immunoprecipitated with the indicated antibodies, and analyzed by immunoblotting (16).


Fig. 2. FLICE2 binds through FADD to the death receptors CD95 and p55. A, AU1FADD or AU1Delta FADD constructs were cotransfected with the indicated FLICE2 expression vectors into 293 cells. Cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-AU1 antibodies and analyzed by immunoblotting with an antibody specific for the small catalytic subunit of FLICE2. B, the carboxyl-terminal FLAG-tagged pro-domain of FLICE2 was cotransfected with the indicated FADD constructs. FLAG-tagged MCH2, an unrelated caspase, served as a negative control. C, recombinant His6 FADD and His6 FADD-DN were immobilized onto Ni-NTA beads and incubated with the indicated in vitro translated 35S-labeled FLICE proteins. Bound proteins were analyzed by autoradiography and quantitated by phosphorimager analysis. D and E, 293 cells were cotransfected with the indicated expression constructs. Cell lysates were prepared after 40 h, followed by immunoprecipitation with FLAG antibodies and immunoblotting as in panel A.
[View Larger Version of this Image (43K GIF file)]


Cell Death Assays

MCF7 cells were transfected by the lipofectamine procedure (Life Technologies, Inc.) with 0.5 µg of FLICE2 and 1.5 µg of p35 or CrmA expression constructs (17). Mutant green fluorescent protein, pEGFP-N1 (50 ng), was included as a transfection marker (Clontech). Cells were fixed 30 h after transfection in 4% formaldehyde, permeabilized and stained with 0.1 µg/ml 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dissolved in phosphate-buffered saline plus 1% Triton X-100, and nuclear morphology of transfected cells evaluated by fluorescence microscopy. Nuclei with chromatin margination and condensation were scored as apoptotic. Human embryonic kidney cells, 293 and 293EBNA, were transfected by CaHPO4 using a 1:10 ratio of pCMV-beta GAL and the appropriate death-inducing construct. Cells were fixed and stained after 24-40 h (17). The percentage of apoptotic cells was determined by calculating the fraction of membrane blebbed blue as a function of total blue cells. All assays were evaluated in triplicate, and the mean and the standard deviation were calculated.


RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Cloning of FLICE2

A search of the GenBank EST data base revealed a clone T96912[GenBank] derived from a human fetal spleen library with high homology to the conserved GSW sequence contained within the small catalytic subunit of all caspases. Sequencing of the EST clone revealed a downstream stop codon as well as 1.3 kilobases of 3'-untranslated region followed by a poly(A) tail. Full-length sequence was obtained by two rounds of PCR extension employing vector- and gene-specific primers. The derived open reading frame encoded a protein of 521 amino acids with a molecular mass of 59 kDa. Because of its significant homology over its entire sequence (28% identity) to FLICE/MACH (8, 9), it was designated FLICE2. Recently, however, a third FLICE homologue, Mch4, has been described (18). The alignment in Fig. 1A shows that FLICE2 and Mch4 have a high degree of identity (90%). This identity extends to the nucleotide level and includes 200 base pairs of 5'-untranslated sequence. Therefore, it is likely that these two proteins are encoded by the same gene and represent alternatively spliced products. The two sequences differ completely, however, in two coding segments (highlighted in blue). First, FLICE2 has a 50-amino acid insert at the carboxyl terminus of the pro-domain. PCR analysis using primers flanking this divergent sequence revealed sequence length polymorphism, with FLICE2 being the longest transcript (data not shown). Thus, the insert probably arises from differential splicing. Second, the 48 carboxyl-terminal amino acids of FLICE2 are distinct and possess only a low level of homology to Mch4. This sequence unique to FLICE2 was, however, present in all PCR products tested and was, in fact, encoded by the original EST (T96912[GenBank]) as indicated in Fig. 1A. Significantly, the enzymatic activity of FLICE2 is expected to be substantially different from Mch4 since this divergent region encodes for half of the small catalytic subunit.


Fig. 1.

A, alignment of the deduced amino acid sequence of FLICE2 with Mch4 and FLICE. Differences between FLICE2 and Mch4 are highlighted in blue. The open reading frame corresponding to EST T96912[GenBank] is indicated by a black line. Amino acids boxed in red identify death effector domain residues in FADD that are conserved with the two DEDs in FLICE and FLICE2. The conserved pentapeptide QACQG is boxed in green. An asterisk indicates the cleavage site between the large and small subunits of the catalytic domain. Based on the CPP32 crystal structure, the symbols above the alignment indicate residues involved in contacting the substrate. The corresponding amino acids in CPP32 are also indicated above the symbols. +, active site cysteine; open circle , contacts with P1 residue; black-triangle, second tier hydrogen bonds with P1; ×, contacts with P4 where the intensity of the violet shading indicates the level of sequence divergence from CPP32. B, PARP cleavage of Granzyme B-processed FLICE2. In vitro translated His6 FLICE2 was purified and activated with granz yme B as described under "Materials and Methods." PARP cleavage was performed in the absence or presence of the indicated tetrapeptide aldehyde inhibitors (1 µm). C, multiple human tissue and cell line mRNA blots were probed with a 32P-labeled probe specific for FLICE2.


[View Larger Version of this Image (58K GIF file)]


Comparison of the crystal structure of CPP32 and the sequence of FLICE2 reveals complete conservation of substrate contacts for the P1 aspartate residue (19). Surprisingly, the amino acids that contact the P4 residue in the CPP32 crystal structure and the homologous residues in FLICE2 are divergent. Of the seven amino acids contacting the P4 residue, only one is conserved (Trp-457). Three are conserved substitutions (Phe-449, Glu-454, Trp-491). The remaining are predicted to significantly change the properties of the P4 pocket (His-451, Val-452, Glu-453). Glu-453, in particular, represents the loss of two positive charges as it is equivalent to Lys-210 in CPP32. Therefore, FLICE2 is likely to have a unique substrate and inhibitor specificity with respect to the P4 position. The first indication that these structural correlates have functional consequences comes from inhibitor studies using CrmA, a pox virus-encoded serpin. CrmA is a poor inhibitor of CPP32 but a strong inhibitor of FLICE (20). The P4 position in CrmA is a leucine. The corresponding P4 binding pocket in FLICE contains an alanine at the position equivalent to Lys-210 in the P4 binding pocket of CPP32. Therefore, the loss of a positive charge in the P4 pocket leads to an active site that can readily accommodate P4 substrate residues that are not negatively charged. Given that the P4 binding pocket in FLICE2 has a negatively charged residue (Glu-453) in place of Lys-210 in CPP32, it is conceivable that FLICE2 may accept positively charged P4 residues.

FLICE2 Cleaves PARP

All mammalian caspases are synthesized as zymogens that need to be proteolytically processed at internal Asp residues to produce the active dimeric species (21). Granzyme B, an aspartate-specific protease from cytotoxic T cells granules, is capable of activating CPP32-like caspase zymogens in vitro (8, 14, 17, 18, 22, 23). His6-tagged FLICE2 was obtained by coupled in vitro transcription/translation, purified, and activated by granzyme B. Residual granzyme B activity was neutralized by addition of anti-GraB, a specific inhibitor of granzyme B (14). FLICE2 enzymatic activity was assessed by the addition of the substrate PARP. Immunoblot analysis revealed FLICE2 to be a competent Ced-3-like protease that was capable of cleaving PARP to its signature 85-kDa apoptotic form (Fig. 1B). Additionally, PARP cleavage was inhibited by the tetrapeptide inhibitor DEVD-CHO, but not by YVAD-CHO, consistent with FLICE2 being a CPP32-like but not ICE-like protease.

FLICE2 Expression

Human tissue and cell line RNA blots were probed with a 32P-labeled cDNA specific for FLICE2 and not contained within Mch4 (Fig. 1C). A transcript of 4.4 kilobases was detected and is consistent with the size of the cloned cDNA. The tissue distribution was strikingly similar to that of FLICE (8) In particular, tissues enriched in lymphoid cells expressed a substantial amount of FLICE2 transcript. Embryonic expression was high in all tissues with the exception of the brain. A variety of transformed cell lines expressed low levels of FLICE2. K562, a chronic myelogenous leukemia line, displayed significant expression. Importantly, the cell lines used for transfections in this study including 293, 293EBNA, and MCF7 did not express detectable levels of endogenous FLICE2 transcript.

While the mRNA expression patterns are consistent with FLICE-related proteins being involved in the maturation of the lymphoid system, additional functions are likely as suggested by the high level of expression of MCH4 and FLICE in the heart (9, 18). FADD and FLICE2 mRNA expression patterns are not identical, suggesting that situations may exist where the two function independently of each other.

FLICE2 Binds the Death Adapter Molecule FADD

Death effector domains have been shown to be the protein interaction motifs that mediate the binding of FLICE to FADD (8). FLICE2, like FLICE, contains two DEDs, with the first being more conserved. To establish the in vivo function of the DEDs, FLICE2/FADD binding experiments were undertaken (Fig. 2A). Co-immunoprecipitation analysis clearly revealed the ability of FLICE2 to specifically bind full-length FADD but not Delta FADD, which lacks a functional DED due to truncation of the first 18 amino-terminal amino acids. Conversely, FLICE2 lacking the DEDs (encoding only the catalytic subunits) did not coprecipitate with FADD. Indeed, the DED containing pro-domain of FLICE2 by itself was fully capable of binding FADD (Fig. 2B). This interaction was specific since the pro-domain of FLICE2 did not bind to FADD with a disrupted DED (Delta FADD). The unrelated caspase Mch2 served as a negative control. Notably, the catalytically inactive cysteine mutant C401S FLICE2 retained its ability to bind FADD, suggesting potential for use as a dominant negative inhibitor.

Fig. 2C shows the result of analogous binding experiments performed in vitro using purified recombinant FADD and FADD-DN that lacks the DED. Again, FLICE2 specifically bound the DED of FADD through its pro-domain. This interaction as assessed by binding of input radiolabeled protein was equivalent for both FLICE and FLICE2. The ability to reconstitute FLICE2-FADD binding in vitro using purified molecules suggested that the interaction was direct and not mediated by an intermediary molecule.

FLICE2 Is Recruited to the Death Receptors CD95 and p55

The FLICE2-FADD interaction raised the possibility that FLICE2, like FLICE, could be recruited to the CD95 or p55 signaling complexes in a FADD-dependent manner. To directly assess if FLICE2 could be recruited to the CD95 or tumor necrosis factor receptors, FLICE2 was cotransfected with FLAG-tagged p55 or CD95 receptors (Fig. 2, panels D and E). As shown, FLICE2 bound both death receptors, and a substantial increase in binding was observed when FADD was included in the transfections (Fig. 2, panels D and E, lanes 1 and 2). This was consistent with initial binding being mediated by endogenous FADD and being enhanced by the expression of exogenous FADD. Confirming this was the finding that expression of FADD-DN, which lacks a DED and is therefore unable to bind FLICE or FLICE2, attenuated the association of FLICE2 with the death receptors (Fig. 2, panels D and E, lane 3).

Overexpression of FLICE2 Induces Apoptosis

The homology of FLICE2 with other members of the caspase family suggests that it is a protease involved in apoptosis. MCF7 or 293EBNA cells were transiently transfected with FLICE2, and recipient cells underwent morphological changes including nuclear condensation, cellular shrinkage, and membrane blebbing, all of which are hallmarks of apoptosis (Fig. 3A). The induction of apoptosis could be efficiently blocked in both cell lines by the well characterized viral inhibitors of caspases, CrmA and p35 (20, 24-26). Importantly, the active site cysteine mutant (C401S FLICE2) inhibited killing by native FLICE2 in 293EBNA cells. This inhibition was probably due to the formation of inactive heterodimers composed of wild type and catalytically inactive molecules as suggested by the crystal structures of ICE and CPP32 (19, 27, 28).


Fig. 3. Dominant negative FLICE2 protects from death receptor and FLICE2 overexpression induced apoptosis. MCF7 cells were transfected by the lipofectamine procedure with the indicated plasmids as described under "Materials and Methods." A green fluorescent protein expression construct was used as a marker for transfection. The morphology of DAPI-stained nuclei in green fluorescent cells was evaluated by microscopy. 293 and 293EBNA cells were cotransfected with the indicated constructs and pCMV-beta GAL. Cells were fixed and stained with X-Gal. The fraction of apoptotic blue cells was evaluated by microscopy.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]


Inhibition of CD95 and p55-induced Cell Death by the FLICE2 Active Site Mutant

293EBNA cells underwent apoptosis when transiently transfected with CD95 receptor (Fig. 3B). This autoactivation on overexpression occurred in a dose-dependent manner (lanes 1 and 3) and has been reported previously (9). Cotransfection with the active site FLICE2 cysteine mutant effectively inhibited the induction of apoptosis to the same extent as CrmA or p35 (lanes 6 and 7). Similarly, transfected cells overexpressing the p55 receptor underwent an apoptotic demise by 24 h. Again, expression of the FLICE2 active site mutant inhibited apoptosis to the same extent as p35, CrmA, and the active site mutant of FLICE (C360S FLICE). Taken together, these results are in keeping with the involvement of FLICE2 in the death pathway engaged by both CD95 and p55 (Fig. 3C). Additionally, these results are consistent with FLICE2 operating at the apex of the caspase cascade.

FLICE, the first caspase shown to be associated with CD95 and p55 receptors, has similar properties. This is predictable given the conservation of functional domains between the two molecules. Both have functional death effector domains in their pro-sequences that can bind FADD, and the signature sequence surrounding the catalytic cysteine is QACQG and not QACRG as it is in the other mammalian caspases. The amino acids that are predicted to contact the P4 site, however, diverge significantly (Fig. 1A). Therefore, FLICE and FLICE2 probably have different substrate specificities. An attractive hypothesis is the notion that receptor oligomerization activates the caspase cascade by approximating the two FLICEs such that they act as substrates for each other. FLICE activation involves two aspartate specific cleavages: Asp-374 between the large and small catalytic subunits and Asp-216 between the pro-domain and large catalytic subunit. The P4 amino acids are Ile and Arg, respectively. A positively charged residue in position 4 is intriguing, given the glutamate substitution (Glu-453) in the P4 binding pocket of FLICE2 and suggests that FLICE2 may be capable of cleaving the pro-domain of FLICE.

In summary, we have shown that FLICE2 is a signaling caspase able to interact with the death receptors p55 and CD95 through the adapter molecule FADD. A dominant negative version of FLICE2 effectively inhibited apoptosis, establishing a role for this molecule in signaling from the death receptors. Future studies will investigate the possibility of whether FLICE/FLICE2 transactivation is responsible for initiating the caspase cascade.


FOOTNOTES

*   This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NIH-ES08111.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Dagger    To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pathology, The University of Michigan Medical School, 1301 Catherine St., Box 0602, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. Tel.: 313-647-0264; Fax: 313-764-4308; E-mail: vmdixit{at}umich.edu.
1   The abbreviations used are: ICE, interleukin-1beta -converting enzyme; FADD, Fas-associated death domain protein; FLICE, FADD-like ICE; PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; DED, death effector domain; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.

Acknowledgments

We thank Chris Froelich for the granzyme B, Arul Chinnaiyan, Marta Muzio, Kim Orth, and Karen O'Rourke for reagents and protocols, and Ian M. Jones for expertise in making the figures.


Note added in proof

Caspase-10/b is the name assigned to FLICE2 according to the reorganized ICE/Ced-3 protease nomenclature.


REFERENCES

  1. Fraser, A., and Evan, G. (1996) Cell 85, 781-784 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  2. Yuan, J., Shaham, S., Ledoux, S., Ellis, H. M., and Horvitz, H. R. (1993) Cell 75, 641-652 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  3. Alnemri, E. A., Livingston, D. J., Nicholson, D. W., Salvesen, G., Thornberry, N. A., Wong, W. W., and Yuan, J. (1996) Cell 87, 171 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  4. Enari, M., Talanian, R., Wong, W., and Nagata, S. (1996) Nature 380, 723-726 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  5. Orth, K., O'Rourke, K., Salvesen, G. S., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 20977-20980 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Liu, X., Kim, C. N., Pohl, J., and Wang, X. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 13371-13376 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Martin, S. J., and Green, D. R. (1995) Cell 82, 349-352 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  8. Muzio, M., Chinnaiyan, A. M., Kischkel, K. C., O'Rourke, K., Shevchenko, A., Ni, J., Scaffidi, C., Bretz, J. D., Zhang, M., Gentz, R., Mann, M., Krammer, P. H., Peter, M. E., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) Cell 85, 817-827 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  9. Boldin, M. P., Goncharov, T. M., Goltsev, Y. V., and Wallach, D. (1996) Cell 85, 803-815 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  10. Chinnaiyan, A. M., O'Rourke, K., Tewari, M., and Dixit, V. M. (1995) Cell 81, 505-512 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  11. Chinnaiyan, A. M., Tepper, C. G., Seldin, M. F., O'Rourke, K., Kischkel, F. C., Hellbardt, S., Krammer, P. H., Peter, M. E., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 4961-4965 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  12. Hsu, H., Shu, H.-B., Pan, M.-P., and Goeddel, D. V. (1996) Cell 84, 299-308 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  13. Sarma, V., Wolf, F. W., Marks, R. M., Shows, T. B., and Dixit, V. M. (1992) J. Immunol. 269, 3302-3312
  14. Quan, L. T., Tewari, M., O'Rourke, K., Dixit, V. M., Snipas, S. J., Poirier, G. G., Ray, C., Pickup, D. J., and Salvesen, G. S. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 93, 1972-1976 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  15. O'Rourke, K. M., Laherty, C. D., and Dixit, V. M. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 24921-24924 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  16. Vincenz, C., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 20029-20034 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  17. Duan, H., Orth, K., Chinnaiyan, A., Poirier, G., Froelich, C. J., He, W.-W., and Dixit, V. M. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 16720-16724 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  18. Fernandes-Alnemri, T., Armstrong, R. C., Krebs, J., Srinivasula, S. M., Wang, L., Bullrich, F., Fritz, L. C., Trapani, J. A., Tomaselli, K. J., Litwick, G., and Alnemri, E. S. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 93, 7464-7469 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  19. Rotonda, J., Nicholson, D. W., Fazil, K. M., Gallant, M., Gareau, Y., Labelle, M., Peterson, E. P., Rasper, D. M., Ruel, R., Vaillancourt, J. P., Thornberry, N. A., and Becker, J. W. (1996) Nat. Struct. Biol. 3, 619-625 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  20. Zhou, Q., Snipas, S., Orth, K., Muzio, M., Dixit, V. M., and Salvesen, G. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, in press
  21. Nicholson, D. W. (1996) Nat. Biotechnol. 14, 297-301 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  22. Darmon, A. J., Nicholson, D. W., and Bleackley, R. C. (1995) Nature 377, 446-448 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  23. Gu, I., Sarnecki, M. A., Fleming, M. A., Lippke, J. A., Bleackley, R. C., and Su, M. S.-S. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 10816-10820 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  24. Komiyama, T., Ray, C. A., Pickup, D. J., Howard, A. D., Thornberry, N. A., Peterson, E. P., and Salvesen, G. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 19331-19337 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  25. Bump, N. J., Hackett, M., Hugunin, M., Seshagiri, S., Brady, K., Chen, P., Ferenz, C., Franklin, S., Ghayur, T., Li, P., Licari, P., Mankovich, J., Shi, L., Greenberg, A. H., Miller, L. K., and Wong, W. W. (1995) Science 269, 1885-1888 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  26. Xue, D., and Horvitz, H. R. (1995) Nature 377, 248-251 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  27. Wilson, K. P., Black, J.-A. F., Thomson, J. A., Kim, E. E., Griffith, J. P., Navia, M. A., Murcko, M. A., Chambers, S. P., Aldape, R. A., Raybuck, S. A., and Livingston, D. J. (1994) Nature 370, 270-275 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  28. Walker, N. P. C., Talanian, R. V., Brady, K. D., Dang, L. C., Bump, N. J., Ferenz, C. R., Franklin, S., Ghayur, T., Hackett, M. C., Hammill, L. D., Herzog, L., Hugunin, M., Houy, W., Mankovich, J. A., McGuiness, L., Orlewicz, E., Paskind, M., Pratt, C. A., Reis, P., Summani, A., Terranova, M., Welch, J. P., Xiong, L., Moller, A., Tracey, D. E., Kamen, R., and Wong, W. W. (1994) Cell 78, 343-352 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

©1997 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.