Abstract
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which is catalytically activated by DNA strand breaks, has been implicated in apoptosis, or programmed cell death. A protease (CPP32) responsible for the cleavage of PARP and necessary for apoptosis was recently purified and characterized. The coordinated sequence of events related to PARP activation and cleavage in apoptosis has now been examined in individual cells. Apoptosis was studied in a human osteosarcoma cell line that undergoes a slow (8 to 10 days), spontaneous, and reproducible death program in culture. Changes in the abundance of intact PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR), and a proteolytic cleavage product of PARP that contains the DNA-binding domain were examined during apoptosis in the context of individual, whole cells by immunofluorescence with specific antibodies. The synthesis of PAR from NAD increased early, within 2 days of cell plating for apoptosis, prior to the appearance of internucleosomal DNA cleavage and before the cells become irreversibly committed to apoptosis, since replating yields viable, nonapoptotic cells. Strong expression of full-length PARP was also detected, by immunofluorescence as well as by Western analysis, during this same time period. However, after ∼4 days in culture, the abundance of both full-length PARP and PAR decreased markedly. After 6 days, a proteolytic cleavage product containing the DNA-binding domain of PARP was detected immunocytochemically and confirmed by Western analysis, both in the nuclei and in the cytoplasm of cells. A recombinant peptide spanning the DNA-binding domain of PARP was expressed, purified, and biotinylated, and was then used as a probe for DNA strand breaks. Fluorescence microscopy with this probe revealed extensive DNA fragmentation during the later stages of apoptosis. This is the first report, using individual, intact cells,demonstrating that poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation of nuclear proteins occurs prior to the commitment to apoptosis, that inactivation and cleavage of PARP begin shortly thereafter, and that very little PAR per se is present during the later stages of apoptosis, despite the presence of a very large number of DNA strand breaks. These results suggest a negative regulatory role for PARP during apoptosis, which in turn may reflect the requirement for adequate NAD and ATP during the later stages of programmed cell death.
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