Heat shock causes proteotoxic stress that induces various cellular responses, including delayed mitotic progression and the generation of an aberrant number of chromosomes. In this study, heat shock delayed the onset of anaphase by increasing the number of misoriented cells, accompanied by the kinetochore localization of budding uninhibited by benzimidazole–related (BubR)1 in a monopolar spindle (Mps)l‐dependent manner. The mitotic delay was canceled by knockdown of mitotic arrest defect (Mad)2. Knockdown of heat shock protein (Hsp)105 partially abrogated the mitotic delay with the loss of the kinetochore localization of BubR1 under heat shock conditions and accelerated mitotic progression under nonstressed conditions. Consistent with this result, Hsp105 knockdown increased the number of anaphase cells with lagging chromosomes, through mitotic slippage, and decreased taxol sensitivity more than Mad2 knockdown. Hsp105 was coprecipitated with cell division cycle (Cdc)20 in an Mps1‐dependent manner; however, its knockdown did not affect coprecipitation of Mad2 and BubR1 with Cdc20. We propose that heat shock delays the onset of anaphase via the activation of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). Hsp105 prevents abnormal cell division by contributing to SAC activation under heat shock and nonstressed conditions by interacting with Cdc20 but not affecting formation of the mitotic checkpoint complex.—Kakihana, A., Oto, Y., Saito, Y., Nakayama, Y. Heat shock‐induced mitotic arrest requires heat shock protein 105 for the activation of spindle assembly checkpoint. FASEB J. 33, 3936–3953 (2019). http://www.fasebj.org
The mitotic spindle is the major piece of cellular machinery essential for faithful chromosome segregation. Whereas Fyn, a member of Src-family kinases, is known to be localized to the meiotic and mitotic spindle microtubules, the role of Fyn in mitotic spindle formation has not yet been completely elucidated. In this study, we studied the role of Fyn in spindle formation and effects on M-phase progression. Re-expression of Fyn induced increases in the fluorescence intensity of mitotic spindle microtubules in SYF cells having triple knock-out mutations of c-Src, c-Yes, and Fyn. Cold treatment results showed that Fyn increases the maximum length of microtubules in HeLa S3 cells in a manner dependent on Fyn kinase activity. Complete depolymerization of microtubules under cold treatment and the following release into 37 °C revealed that the increase in the microtubule length in Fyn-expressing cells may be attributed to the promotion of microtubule polymerization. After cold treatment, Fyn promotes the accumulation of EB1, which is a plus-end tracking protein and facilitates microtubule growth, in a manner dependent on the kinase activity. Furthermore, Fyn accelerates the M phase progression of cells from nocodazole arrest. These results suggest that Fyn facilitates mitotic spindle formation through the increase in microtubule polymerization, resulting in the acceleration of M-phase progression.
The mammalian stress protein Hsp105β, which is specifically expressed during mild heat shock and localizes to the nucleus, induces the major stress protein Hsp70. In the present study, we performed yeast two-hybrid and one-hybrid screenings to identify the regulators of Hsp105β-mediated hsp70 gene expression. Six and two proteins were detected as Hsp105β- and hsp70 promoter-binding proteins, respectively. A luciferase reporter gene assay revealed that hsp70 promoter activation is enhanced by the transcriptional co-activator AF9 and splicing mediator SNRPE, but suppressed by the coiled-coil domain-containing protein CCDC127. Of these proteins, the knockdown of SNRPE suppressed the expression of Hsp70 irrespective of the presence of Hsp105β, indicating that SNRPE essentially functions as a transcriptional activator of hsp70 gene expression. The overexpression of HSP70 in tumor cells has been associated with cell survival and drug resistance. We here identified novel regulators of Hsp70 expression in stress signaling and also provided important insights into Hsp70-targeted anti-cancer therapy. J. Cell. Biochem. 117: 2109-2117, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Heat shock protein 105 (Hsp105) is a molecular chaperone, and the isoforms Hsp105α and Hsp105β exhibit distinct functions with different subcellular localizations. Hsp105β localizes in the nucleus and induces the expression of the major heat shock protein Hsp70, whereas cytoplasmic Hsp105α is less effective in inducing Hsp70 expression. Hsp105 shuttles between the cytoplasm and the nucleus; the subcellular localization is governed by the relative activities of the nuclear localization signal (NLS) and nuclear export signal (NES). Here, we show that nuclear accumulation of Hsp105α but not Hsp105β is involved in Adriamycin (ADR) sensitivity. Knockdown of Hsp105α induces cell death at low ADR concentration, at which ADR is less effective in inducing cell death in the presence of Hsp105α. Of note, Hsp105 is localized in the nucleus under these conditions, even though Hsp105β is not expressed, indicating that Hsp105α accumulates in the nucleus in response to ADR treatment. The exogenously expressed Hsp105α but not its NLS mutant localizes in the nucleus of ADR‐treated cells. In addition, the expression level of the nuclear export protein chromosomal maintenance 1 (CRM1) was decreased by ADR treatment of cells, and CRM1 knockdown caused nuclear accumulation of Hsp105α both in the presence and absence of ADR. These results indicating that Hsp105α accumulates in the nucleus in a manner dependent on the NLS activity via the suppression of nuclear export. Our findings suggest a role of nuclear Hsp105α in the sensitivity against DNA‐damaging agents in tumor cells.
The mammalian HSP105/110 family consists of four members, including Hsp105 and Apg‐1, which function as molecular chaperones. Recently, we reported that Hsp105 knockdown increases sensitivity to the DNA‐damaging agent Adriamycin but decreases sensitivity to the microtubule‐targeting agent paclitaxel. However, whether the other Hsp105/110 family proteins have the same functional property is unknown. Here, we show that Apg‐1 has different roles from Hsp105 in cell proliferation, cell division, and drug sensitivity. We generated the Apg‐1‐knockdown HeLa S3 cells by lentiviral expression of Apg‐1‐targeting short hairpin RNA. Knockdown of Apg‐1 but not Hsp105 decreased cell proliferation. Apg‐1 knockdown increased cell death upon Adriamycin treatment without affecting paclitaxel sensitivity. The cell synchronization experiment suggests that Apg‐1 functions in mitotic progression at a different mitotic subphase from Hsp105, which cause difference in paclitaxel sensitivity. Since Apg‐1 is overexpressed in certain types of tumors, Apg‐1 may become a potential therapeutic target for cancer treatment without causing resistance to the microtubule‐targeting agents.
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