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Dive into the research topics where Robert V. Talanian is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert V. Talanian.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Simultaneous degradation of alphaII-and betaII-spectrin by caspase 3 (CPP32) in apoptotic cells

Kevin K. W. Wang; Rand Posmantur; Rathna Nath; Kim M. McGinnis; Margaret Whitton; Robert V. Talanian; Susan B. Glantz; Jon S. Morrow

The degradation of αII- and βII-spectrin during apoptosis in cultured human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells was investigated. Immunofluorescent staining showed that the collapse of the cortical spectrin cytoskeleton is an early event following staurosporine challenge. This collapse correlated with the generation of a series of prominent spectrin breakdown products (BDPs) derived from both αII- and βII-subunits. Major C-terminal αII-spectrin BDPs were detected at ≈150, 145, and 120 kDa (αII-BDP150, αII-BDP145, and αII-BDP120, respectively); major C-terminal βII-spectrin BDPs were at ≈110 and 85 kDa (βII-BDP110 and βII-BDP85, respectively). N-terminal sequencing of the major fragments produced in vitro by caspase 3 revealed that αII-BDP150 and αII-BDP120 were generated by cleavages at DETD1185*S1186 and DSLD1478*S1479, respectively. For βII-spectrin, a major caspase site was detected at DEVD1457*S1458 , and both βII-BDP110 and βII-BDP85 shared a common N-terminal sequence starting with Ser1458. An additional cleavage site near the C terminus, at ETVD2146*S2147, was found to account for βII-BDP85. Studies using specific caspase or calpain inhibitors indicate that the pattern of spectrin breakdown during apoptosis differs from that during non-apoptotic cell death. We postulate that in concert with calpain, caspase rapidly targets critical sites in both αII- and βII-spectrin and thereby initiates a rapid dissolution of the spectrin-actin cortical cytoskeleton with apoptosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Activation of a CrmA-insensitive, p35-sensitive Pathway in Ionizing Radiation-induced Apoptosis

Rakesh Datta; Hiromi Kojima; David Banach; Nancy J. Bump; Robert V. Talanian; Emad S. Alnemri; Ralph R. Weichselbaum; Winnie W. Wong; Donald Kufe

The response of eukaryotic cells to ionizing radiation (IR) includes induction of apoptosis. However, the signals that regulate this response are unknown. The present studies demonstrate that IR treatment of U-937 cells is associated with: (i) internucleosomal DNA fragmentation; (ii) cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase; (iii) cleavage of protein kinase C δ; and (iv) induction of an Ac-DEVD-p-nitroanilide cleaving activity. Overexpression of the cowpox protein CrmA blocked tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced apoptosis but had no effect on IR-induced DNA fragmentation or cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and protein kinase C δ. By contrast, overexpression of the baculovirus p35 protein blocked both IR- and TNF-induced apoptosis. The results further demonstrate that the IR-induced proteolytic activity is directly inhibited by the addition of purified recombinant p35, but not by CrmA. We show that the CPP32 protease is sensitive to p35 and not CrmA. We also show that IR induces activation of CPP32 and that this event, like induction of apoptosis, is sensitive to overexpression of p35 and not CrmA. These findings indicate that IR-induced apoptosis involves activation of CPP32 and that this CrmA-insensitive apoptotic pathway is distinct from those induced by TNF and certain other stimuli.


Biochemical Journal | 2001

Targeting of the transcription factor Max during apoptosis: phosphorylation- regulated cleavage by caspase-5 at an unusual glutamic acid residue in position P1

Anja Krippner-Heidenreich; Robert V. Talanian; Renate Sekul; Regine Kraft; Hubert Thole; Holger Ottleben; Bernhard Lüscher

Max is the central component of the Myc/Max/Mad network of transcription factors that regulate growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Whereas the Myc and Mad genes and proteins are highly regulated, Max expression is constitutive and no post-translational regulation is known. We have found that Max is targeted during Fas-induced apoptosis. Max is first dephosphorylated and subsequently cleaved by caspases. Two specific cleavage sites for caspases in Max were identified, one at IEVE(10) decreasing S and one at SAFD(135) decreasing G near the C-terminus, which are cleaved in vitro by caspase-5 and caspase-7 respectively. Mutational analysis indicates that both sites are also used in vivo. Thus Max represents the first caspase-5 substrate. The unusual cleavage after a glutamic acid residue is observed only with full-length, DNA-binding competent Max protein but not with corresponding peptides, suggesting that structural determinants might be important for this activity. Furthermore, cleavage by caspase-5 is inhibited by the protein kinase CK2-mediated phosphorylation of Max at Ser-11, a previously mapped phosphorylation site in vivo. These findings suggest that Fas-mediated dephosphorylation of Max is required for cleavage by caspase-5. The modifications that occur on Max in response to Fas signalling affect the DNA-binding activity of Max/Max homodimers. Taken together, our findings uncover three distinct processes, namely dephosphorylation and cleavage by caspase-5 and caspase-7, that target Max during Fas-mediated apoptosis, suggesting the regulation of the Myc/Max/Mad network through its central component.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

Role for caspase-mediated cleavage of Rad51 in induction of apoptosis by DNA damage.

Yinyin Huang; Shuji Nakada; Takatoshi Ishiko; Taiju Utsugisawa; Rakesh Datta; Surender Kharbanda; Kiyotsugu Yoshida; Robert V. Talanian; Ralph R. Weichselbaum; Donald Kufe; Zhi-Min Yuan

ABSTRACT We report here that the Rad51 recombinase is cleaved in mammalian cells during the induction of apoptosis by ionizing radiation (IR) exposure. The results demonstrate that IR induces Rad51 cleavage by a caspase-dependent mechanism. Further support for involvement of caspases is provided by the finding that IR-induced proteolysis of Rad51 is inhibited by Ac-DEVD-CHO. In vitro studies show that Rad51 is cleaved by caspase 3 at a DVLD/N site. Stable expression of a Rad51 mutant in which the aspartic acid residues were mutated to alanines (AVLA/N) confirmed that the DVLD/N site is responsible for the cleavage of Rad51 in IR-induced apoptosis. The functional significance of Rad51 proteolysis is supported by the finding that, unlike intact Rad51, the N- and C-terminal cleavage products fail to exhibit recombinase activity. In cells, overexpression of the Rad51(D-A) mutant had no effect on activation of caspase 3 but did abrogate in part the apoptotic response to IR exposure. We conclude that proteolytic inactivation of Rad51 by a caspase-mediated mechanism contributes to the cell death response induced by DNA damage.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Caspase-Dependent Regulation and Subcellular Redistribution of the Transcriptional Modulator YY1 during Apoptosis

Anja Krippner-Heidenreich; Gesa Walsemann; Maroun J. Beyrouthy; Stefanie Speckgens; Regine Kraft; Hubert Thole; Robert V. Talanian; Myra M. Hurt; Bernhard Lüscher

ABSTRACT The transcriptional regulator Yin Yang 1 (YY1) controls many aspects of cell behavior and is essential for development. We analyzed the fate of YY1 during apoptosis and studied the functional consequences. We observed that this factor is rapidly translocated into the cell nucleus in response to various apoptotic stimuli, including activation of Fas, stimulation by tumor necrosis factor, and staurosporine and etoposide treatment. Furthermore, YY1 is cleaved by caspases in vitro and in vivo at two distinct sites, IATD12G and DDSD119G, resulting in the deletion of the first 119 amino acids early in the apoptotic process. This activity generates an N-terminally truncated YY1 fragment (YY1Δ119) that has lost its transactivation domain but retains its DNA binding domain. Indeed, YY1Δ119 is no longer able to stimulate gene transcription but interacts with DNA. YY1Δ119 but not the wild-type protein or the caspase-resistant mutant YY1D12A/D119A enhances Fas-induced apoptosis, suggesting that YY1 is involved in a positive feedback loop during apoptosis. Our findings provide evidence for a new mode of regulation of YY1 and define a novel aspect of the involvement of YY1 in the apoptotic process.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1996

Proteolytic activation of protein kinase C delta by an ICE/CED 3-like protease induces characteristics of apoptosis.

Tariq Ghayur; Margaret Hugunin; Robert V. Talanian; Sheldon Ratnofsky; Christopher Quinlan; Yutaka Emoto; Pramod Pandey; Rakesh Datta; Yinyin Huang; Surender Kharbanda; Hamish Allen; Robert Kamen; Winnie W. Wong; Donald Kufe


Biochemical Journal | 1996

Non-erythroid alpha-spectrin breakdown by calpain and interleukin 1 beta-converting-enzyme-like protease(s) in apoptotic cells: contributory roles of both protease families in neuronal apoptosis.

Rathna Nath; Kadee J. Raser; Daniel Stafford; Iradj Hajimohammadreza; Avigail Posner; Hamish Allen; Robert V. Talanian; Po-Wai Yuen; Richard B. Gilbertsen; Kevin K. W. Wang


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1998

Caspase-Mediated Fragmentation of Calpain Inhibitor Protein Calpastatin during Apoptosis

Kevin K. W. Wang; Rand Posmantur; Ravi Nadimpalli; Rathna Nath; Panaiyur S. Mohan; Ralph A. Nixon; Robert V. Talanian; Martha Keegan; Linda Herzog; Hamish Allen


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995

Identification and Characterization of ICH-2, a Novel Member of the Interleukin-1β-converting Enzyme Family of Cysteine Proteases

Joanne Kamens; Michael Paskind; Margaret Hugunin; Robert V. Talanian; Hamish Allen; David Banach; Nancy J. Bump; Maria C. Hackett; Cynthia Johnston; Ping Li; John A. Mankovich; Michele Terranova; Tariq Ghayur


Cancer Research | 1997

CRADD, a novel human apoptotic adaptor molecule for caspase-2, and FasL/tumor necrosis factor receptor-interacting protein RIP.

Manzoor Ahmad; Srinivasa M. Srinivasula; Lijuan Wang; Robert V. Talanian; Gerald Litwack; Teresa Fernandes-Alnemri; Emad S. Alnemri

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Winnie W. Wong

University of California

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Emad S. Alnemri

Thomas Jefferson University

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Tariq Ghayur

University of California

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