Inhibition of JNK signaling diminishes early but not late cellular stress-induced apoptosis

Abstract
The human leukemic T-cell line Jurkat was used to define the role of the cellular stress pathway with its key player kinase JNK in cancer therapy-induced apoptosis. JNK activity was inhibited by stable transfection with a dominant negative mutant of the upstream kinase JNKK/MKK4 or with the novel, potent and selective JNK1, -2 and -3 inhibitor SP600125. Inhibition of JNK activity delayed the onset of apoptosis induced by cisplatin, doxorubicin, γ-irradiation and CD95-L but did not prevent apoptosis per se. Early events during apoptosis such as induction of CD95-L, activation of caspase-8 and exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface were strongly inhibited. Also, at early time points of apoptosis, loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential and release of cytochrome c were markedly impaired. However, late signaling events during apoptosis such as cleavage of PARP and DNA fragmentation apoptosis were only marginally affected. These findings are in accordance with the activity of initiator and effector caspases. Whereas activity of the initiator caspase-8 was strongly inhibited early and late after induction, an inhibition of caspase-3 activity was only observed early after induction of apoptosis. We therefore suggest that cellular stress signaling contributes to the initiation of apoptosis, whereas it might be dispensable for the progression of apoptosis. Dysfunction of this pathway under pathological conditions might contribute to therapy resistance of cancer cells.