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JCS ePress online publication date 29 Aug 2006
doi: 10.1242/jcs.03102


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Research Article

Adenoviral vector saturates Akt pro-survival signaling and blocks insulin-mediated rescue of tumor-necrosis-factor-induced apoptosis


Kathryn Miller-Jensen, Kevin A. Janes, Yun-Ling Wong, Linda G. Griffith, and Douglas A. Lauffenburger*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: lauffen{at}mit.edu)

Recombinant adenoviruses are used extensively as delivery vectors in clinical gene therapy and in molecular biology, but little is known about how the viral carrier itself contributes to cellular responses. Here we show that infection with an E1/E3-deleted adenoviral vector (Adv) sensitizes human epithelial cells to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced apoptosis. To explore the mechanism of Adv-mediated sensitization, we measured activity time courses for three protein kinases (MK2, IKK and JNK1) centrally involved in the TNF-receptor signaling network, as well as two kinases (Akt and ERK) activated by growth factors. Both the pro-apoptotic signal MK2 and the anti-apoptotic signal Akt were upregulated when Adv-infected cells were stimulated with TNF, and MK2 and Akt each contributed significantly to TNF-induced cell fate. Surprisingly, further activation of Akt in Adv-infected cells via insulin treatment did not significantly reduce apoptosis or MK2 activity. We show that the ineffectiveness of insulin-mediated anti-apoptotic signaling through Akt is due to saturation of Akt-effector substrate phosphorylation in Adv-infected cells. Normalizing Akt signaling relative to its Adv-induced baseline activity identified a global dose-response curve that relates Akt signaling to cellular survival. Thus, the background Akt activity induced by Adv limits the transmission of anti-apoptotic signals in response to further cytokine or growth-factor stimulation. The phenotypic and intracellular synergy between Adv and TNF may have implications for interpreting cellular responses in gene-therapy and laboratory applications.


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