Michael Butterworth
University of Leicester
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Featured researches published by Michael Butterworth.
The EMBO Journal | 2001
Shawn B. Bratton; Gail Walker; Srinivasa M. Srinivasula; Xiao Ming Sun; Michael Butterworth; Emad S. Alnemri; Gerald M. Cohen
During apoptosis, release of cytochrome c initiates dATP‐dependent oligomerization of Apaf‐1 and formation of the apoptosome. In a cell‐free system, we have addressed the order in which apical and effector caspases, caspases‐9 and ‐3, respectively, are recruited to, activated and retained within the apoptosome. We propose a multi‐step process, whereby catalytically active processed or unprocessed caspase‐9 initially binds the Apaf‐1 apoptosome in cytochrome c/dATP‐activated lysates and consequently recruits caspase‐3 via an interaction between the active site cysteine (C287) in caspase‐9 and a critical aspartate (D175) in caspase‐3. We demonstrate that XIAP, an inhibitor‐of‐apoptosis protein, is normally present in high molecular weight complexes in unactivated cell lysates, but directly interacts with the apoptosome in cytochrome c/dATP‐activated lysates. XIAP associates with oligomerized Apaf‐1 and/or processed caspase‐9 and influences the activation of caspase‐3, but also binds activated caspase‐3 produced within the apoptosome and sequesters it within the complex. Thus, XIAP may regulate cell death by inhibiting the activation of caspase‐3 within the apoptosome and by preventing release of active caspase‐3 from the complex.
Blood | 2009
Meike Vogler; Michael Butterworth; Aneela Majid; Renata Walewska; Xiao-Ming Sun; Martin J. S. Dyer; Gerald M. Cohen
ABT-737 and its orally active analog, ABT-263, are rationally designed inhibitors of BCL2 and BCL-X(L). ABT-263 shows promising activity in early phase 1 clinical trials in B-cell malignancies, particularly chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). In vitro, peripheral blood CLL cells are extremely sensitive to ABT-737 (EC(50) approximately 7 nM), with rapid induction of apoptosis in all 60 patients tested, independent of parameters associated with disease progression and chemotherapy resistance. In contrast to data from cell lines, ABT-737-induced apoptosis in CLL cells was largely MCL1-independent. Because CLL cells within lymph nodes are more resistant to apoptosis than those in peripheral blood, CLL cells were cultured on CD154-expressing fibroblasts in the presence of interleukin-4 (IL-4) to mimic the lymph node microenvironment. CLL cells thus cultured developed an approximately 1000-fold resistance to ABT-737 within 24 hours. Investigations of the underlying mechanism revealed that this resistance occurred upstream of mitochondrial perturbation and involved de novo synthesis of the antiapoptotic proteins BCL-X(L) and BCL2A1, which were responsible for resistance to low and high ABT-737 concentrations, respectively. Our data indicate that after therapy with ABT-737-related inhibitors, resistant CLL cells might develop in lymph nodes in vivo and that treatment strategies targeting multiple BCL2 antiapoptotic members simultaneously may have synergistic activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Xiao Ming Sun; Shawn B. Bratton; Michael Butterworth; Marion MacFarlane; Gerald M. Cohen
Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL are reported to inhibit CD95-mediated apoptosis in “type II” but not in “type I” cells. In the present studies, we found that stimulation of CD95 receptors, with either agonistic antibody or CD95 ligand, resulted in the activation of caspase-8, which in turn processed caspase-3 between its large and small subunits. However, in contrast to control cells, those overexpressing either Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL displayed a distinctive pattern of caspase-3 processing. Indeed, the resulting p20/p12 caspase-3 was not active and did not undergo normal autocatalytic processing to form p17/p12 caspase-3, because it was bound to and inhibited by endogenous X-linked inhibitor-of-apoptosis protein (XIAP). Importantly, Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL inhibited the release of both cytochrome c and Smac from mitochondria. However, since Smac alone was sufficient to promote caspase-3 activityin vitro by inactivating XIAP, we proposed the existence of a death receptor-induced, Smac-dependent and apoptosome-independent pathway. This type II pathway was subsequently reconstituted in vitro using purified recombinant proteins at endogenous concentrations. Thus, mitochondria and associated Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL proteins may play a functional role in death receptor-induced apoptosis by modulating the release of Smac. Our data strongly suggest that the relative ratios of XIAP (and other inhibitor-of-apoptosis proteins) to active caspase-3 and Smac may dictate, in part, whether a cell exhibits a type I or type II phenotype.
Molecular Cell | 2009
Michelle A. Hughes; Nicholas Harper; Michael Butterworth; Kelvin Cain; Gerald M. Cohen; Marion MacFarlane
The death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) is critical for initiation of death-receptor-mediated apoptosis; however, paradoxically, CD95 also signals for cell survival. Here, we reconstitute a functional DISC using only purified CD95, FADD, and procaspase-8 and unveil a two-step activation mechanism involving both dimerization and proteolytic cleavage of procaspase-8 that is obligatory for death-receptor-induced apoptosis. Initially, dimerization yields active procaspase-8 with a very restricted substrate repertoire, limited to itself or c-FLIP. Proteolytic cleavage is then required to fully activate caspase-8, thereby permitting DISC-mediated cleavage of the critical exogenous apoptotic substrates, caspase-3 and Bid. This switch in catalytic activity and substrate range is a key determinant of DISC signaling, as cellular expression of noncleavable procaspase-8 mutants, which undergo DISC-mediated oligomerization, but not cleavage, fails to initiate CD95-induced apoptosis. Thus, using the reconstituted DISC, we have delineated a crucial two-step activation mechanism whereby activated death receptor complexes can trigger death or survival.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Young Eun Choi; Michael Butterworth; Srinivas Malladi; Colin S. Duckett; Gerald M. Cohen; Shawn B. Bratton
Inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins are widely expressed throughout nature and suppress cell death under a variety of circumstances. X-linked IAP, the prototypical IAP in mammals, inhibits apoptosis largely through direct inhibition of the initiator caspase-9 and the effector caspase-3 and -7. Two additional IAP family members, cellular IAP1 (cIAP1) and cIAP2, were once thought to also inhibit caspases, but more recent studies have suggested otherwise. Here we demonstrate that cIAP1 does not significantly inhibit the proteolytic activities of effector caspases on fluorogenic or endogenous substrates. However, cIAP1 does bind to caspase-3 and -7 and does so, remarkably, at distinct steps prior to or following the removal of their prodomains, respectively. Indeed, cIAP1 bound to an exposed IAP-binding motif, AKPD, on the N terminus of the large subunit of fully mature caspase-7, whereas cIAP1 bound to partially processed caspase-3 in a manner that required its prodomain and cleavage between its large and small subunits but did not involve a classical IAP-binding motif. As a ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase, cIAP1 ubiquitinated caspase-3 and -7, concomitant with binding, in a reaction catalyzed by members of the UbcH5 subfamily (ubiquitin carrier protein/ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes), and in the case of caspase-3, differentially by UbcH8. Moreover, wild-type caspase-7 and a chimeric caspase-3 (bearing the AKPD motif) were degraded in vivo in a proteasome-dependent manner. Thus, cIAPs likely suppress apoptosis, at least in part, by facilitating the ubiquitination and turnover of active effector caspases in cells.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2002
Shawn B. Bratton; Jennifer M. Lewis; Michael Butterworth; Colin S. Duckett; Gerald M. Cohen
Ligation of death receptors or formation of the Apaf-1 apoptosome results in the activation of caspases and execution of apoptosis. We recently demonstrated that X-linked inhibitor-of-apoptosis protein (XIAP) associates with the apoptosome in vitro. By utilizing XIAP mutants, we now report that XIAP binds to the ‘native’ apoptosome complex via a specific interaction with the small p12 subunit of processed caspase-9. Indeed, we provide the first direct evidence that XIAP can simultaneously bind active caspases-9 and -3 within the same complex and that inhibition of caspase-3 by the Linker-BIR2 domain prevents disruption of BIR3-caspase-9 interactions. Recent studies suggest that inhibition of caspase-3 is dispensable for its anti-apoptotic effects. However, we clearly demonstrate that inhibition of caspase-3 is required to inhibit CD95 (Fas/Apo-1)-mediated apoptosis, whereas inhibition of either caspase-9 or caspase-3 prevents Bax-induced cell death. Finally, we illustrate for the first time that XIAP mutants, which are incapable of binding to caspases-9 and -3 are completely devoid of anti-apoptotic activity. Thus, XIAPs capacity to maintain inhibition of caspase-9 within the Apaf-1 apoptosome is influenced by its ability to simultaneously inhibit active caspase-3, and depending upon the apoptotic stimulus, inhibition of caspase-9 or 3 is essential for XIAPs anti-apoptotic activity.
American Journal of Pathology | 2001
Emma Parrott; Michael Butterworth; Andrew Green; Ian N.H. White; Peter Greaves
Adenomyosis is a fairly frequent disorder in adult women characterized by the haphazard location of endometrial glands and stroma deep within the myometrium of the uterus. This study compared the effects on uterine development of the selective estrogen receptor modulators, tamoxifen, toremifene, and raloxifene with estradiol when given orally to female mice on days 2 to 5 after birth. Uterine adenomyosis was found in all (14 of 14) mice dosed with tamoxifen and most mice (12 of 14) treated with toremifene, but in none of the vehicle-dosed controls, in only one animal treated with raloxifene at 42 and 90 days after dosing and in none of the mice treated with estradiol at 42 days. At 6 days, the uterus in the groups that developed a high incidence of adenomyosis showed histological evidence of disturbed differentiation of the myometrium. Gene-expression XY-scatterplots using Clontech mouse 1.2 Atlas mouse cDNA expression arrays analyzing total uterine RNA showed nerve growth factor-alpha, preadipocyte factor-1, and insulin-like growth factor-2 were key genes differentially modified by tamoxifen or toremifene treatment, relative to the controls. As these genes may play an important role in regulating differentiation and development of the myometrium, these data suggest that adenomyosis may be caused primarily by defects in the formation of the myometrium.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008
Meike Vogler; David Dinsdale; Xiao-Ming Sun; Kenneth W. Young; Michael Butterworth; Pierluigi Nicotera; Martin J. S. Dyer; Gerald M. Cohen
Primary chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells are exquisitely sensitive to ABT-737, a small molecule BCL2-antagonist, which induces many of the classical biochemical and ultrastructural features of apoptosis, including BAX/BAK oligomerization, cytochrome c release, caspase activation and chromatin condensation. Surprisingly, ABT-737 also induces mitochondrial inner membrane permeabilization (MIMP) resulting in mitochondrial matrix swelling and rupture of the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM), so permitting the rapid efflux of cytochrome c from mitochondrial cristae and facilitating rapid caspase activation and apoptosis. BAX and BAK appear to be involved in the OMM discontinuities as they localize to the OMM break points. Notably, ABT-737 induced mitochondrial matrix swelling and OMM discontinuities in other primary B-cell malignancies, including mantle cell, follicular and marginal zone lymphoma cells but not in several cell lines studied. Thus, we describe a new paradigm of apoptosis in primary B-cell malignancies, whereby targeting of BCL2 results in all the classical features of apoptosis together with OMM rupture independent of caspase activation. This mechanism may be far more prevalent than hitherto recognized due to the failure of most methods, used to measure apoptosis, to recognize such a mechanism.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2013
Shankar Varadarajan; Meike Vogler; Michael Butterworth; David Dinsdale; Loren D. Walensky; Gerald M. Cohen
High levels of BCL-2 family proteins are implicated in a failed/ineffective apoptotic programme, often resulting in diseases, including cancer. Owing to their potential as drug targets in cancer therapy, several inhibitors of BCL-2 family proteins have been developed. These primarily target specific members of the BCL-2 family, particularly BCL-2 and BCL-XL but are ineffective against MCL-1. Major efforts have been invested in developing inhibitors of MCL-1, which is commonly amplified in human tumours and associated with tumour relapse and chemoresistance. In this report, the specificity of several BCL-2 family inhibitors (ABT-263, UCB-1350883, apogossypol and BH3I-1) was investigated and compared with putative MCL-1 inhibitors designed to exhibit improved or selective binding affinities for MCL-1 (TW-37, BI97C1, BI97C10, BI112D1, compounds 6 and 7, and MCL-1 inhibitor molecule (MIM-1)). ABT-263, BI97C1, BI112D1, MIM-1 and TW-37 exhibited specificity in inducing apoptosis in a Bax/Bak- and caspase-9-dependent manner, whereas the other agents showed no killing activity, or little or no specificity. Of these inhibitors, only ABT-263 and UCB-1350883 induced apoptosis in a BCL-2- or BCL-XL-dependent system. In cells that depend on MCL-1 for survival, ABT-263 and TW-37 induced extensive apoptosis, suggesting that at high concentrations these inhibitors have the propensity to inhibit MCL-1 in a cellular context. TW-37 induced apoptosis, assessed by chromatin condensation, caspase processing and phosphatidylserine externalisation, in a BAK-dependent manner and in cells that require MCL-1 for survival. TW-37-mediated apoptosis was also partly dependent on NOXA, suggesting that derivatives of TW-37, if engineered to exhibit better selectivity and efficacy at low nanomolar concentrations, may provide useful lead compounds for further synthetic programmes. Expanded medicinal chemistry iteration, as performed for the ABT series, may likewise improve the potency and specificity of the evaluated MCL-1 inhibitors.
Haematologica | 2010
Maria Baou; Susan L. Kohlhaas; Michael Butterworth; Meike Vogler; David Dinsdale; Renata Walewska; Aneela Majid; Eric Eldering; Martin J. S. Dyer; Gerald M. Cohen
Background Bortezomib has been successfully used in the treatment of multiple myeloma and has been proposed as a potential treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia. In this study we investigated the mechanism by which bortezomib induces apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. Design and Methods Using western blot analysis, we monitored the regulation of BCL2 family members, proteins of the unfolded protein response (endoplasmic reticulum stress response) and activation of caspases in relation to induction of apoptosis (measured by annexin-propidium iodide staining and loss of mitochondrial membrane potential) by bortezomib in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. Results Bortezomib induced apoptosis through activation of the mitochondrial pathway independently of changes associated with endoplasmic reticulum stress. Perturbation of mitochondria was regulated by a rapid and transcription-independent increase of NOXA protein, which preceded release of cytochrome c, HtrA2, Smac and activation of caspase-9 and −3. NOXA had a short half life (~ 1–2 h) and was ubiquitinated on at least three primary lysine residues, resulting in proteasomal-dependent degradation. Down-regulation of NOXA, using short interfering RNA in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells, decreased bortezomib-induced apoptosis. Finally bortezomib when combined with seliciclib resulted in a stronger and earlier increase in NOXA protein, caspase-3 cleavage and induction of apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells. Conclusions These results highlight a critical role for NOXA in bortezomib–induced apoptosis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells and suggest that this drug may become more efficient for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia if combined with other agents able to interfere with the basal levels of MCL1.