Abstract
We have shown previously that caspase-6 activity is lethal to human neurons (LeBlanc et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2000). Here we find that 17-beta-estradiol but not 17-alpha-estradiol prevents caspase-6-mediated neuronal cell death. 17-beta-estradiol-treated neuronal extracts directly inhibit recombinant active caspase-6, caspase-3, caspase-7, and caspase-8 in vitro. We conclude that 17-beta-estradiol induces a caspase inhibitory factor (CIF) that is preventing neuronal apoptosis. The induction of CIF occurs within 10 min of 17-beta-estradiol exposure to neurons, does not require de novo protein synthesis, and involves mitogen-activated protein kinase activation. The effect is antagonized by the estrogen receptor antagonist tamoxifen. In contrast, 17-beta-estradiol does not induce CIF or prevent caspase-mediated cell death in cultured astrocytes. CIF does not act through oxidation of the caspase active site. CIF activity copurifies with proteins of between 12 and 14 kDa in size. Our results indicate that 17-beta-estradiol induces an inhibitor of active caspases through a receptor-mediated nongenomic pathway and provide an additional mechanism for the neuroprotective action of 17-beta-estradiol that is likely highly relevant to the understanding of the role of estrogen against Alzheimer's disease.