Abstract

The widely expressed protein Fas is a member of the tumour necrosis factor receptor family which can trigger apoptosis. However, Fas surface expression does not necessarily render cells susceptible to Fas ligand-induced death signals, indicating that inhibitors of the apoptosis-signalling pathway must exist. Here we report the characterization of an inhibitor of apoptosis, designated FLIP (for FLICE-inhibitory protein), which is predominantly expressed in muscle and lymphoid tissues. The short form, FLIPs, contains two death effector domains and is structurally related to the viral FLIP inhibitors of apoptosis, whereas the long form, FLIP(L), contains in addition a caspase-like domain in which the active-centre cysteine residue is substituted by a tyrosine residue. FLIPs and FLIP(L) interact with the adaptor protein FADD and the protease FLICE, and potently inhibit apoptosis induced by all known human death receptors. FLIP(L) is expressed during the early stage of T-cell activation, but disappears when T cells become susceptible to Fas ligand-mediated apoptosis. High levels of FLIP(L) protein are also detectable in melanoma cell lines and malignant melanoma tumours. Thus FLIP may be implicated in tissue homeostasis as an important regulator of apoptosis.

Keywords

Death domainApoptosisCaspase 8Cell biologySignal transducing adaptor proteinProgrammed cell deathFlipFas receptorFADDCaspaseEffectorBiologyReceptorInhibitor of apoptosisSignal transductionCancer researchBiochemistry

MeSH Terms

Adaptor ProteinsSignal TransducingAmino Acid SequenceAnimalsApoptosisCASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating ProteinCarrier ProteinsCaspase 8Caspase 9CaspasesCellsCulturedChromosomesHumanPair 2CloningMolecularCysteine EndopeptidasesFas-Associated Death Domain ProteinHumansIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsLymphocyte ActivationMelanomaMolecular Sequence DataSequence HomologyAmino AcidT-LymphocytesTumor CellsCulturedfas Receptor

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Publication Info

Year
1997
Type
article
Volume
388
Issue
6638
Pages
190-195
Citations
2553
Access
Closed

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2553
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163
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2055
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Cite This

Martin Irmler, Margot Thome, Michael Hahne et al. (1997). Inhibition of death receptor signals by cellular FLIP. Nature , 388 (6638) , 190-195. https://doi.org/10.1038/40657

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/40657
PMID
9217161

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%