Phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) can modulate actin filament dynamics in response to growth factors. During heat shock, HSP27 is phosphorylated at the same sites and by the same protein kinase as during mitogenic stimulation. This suggests that the same function of the protein may be activated during growth factor stimulation and the stress response. To determine the role of HSP27 phosphorylation in the heat shock response, several stable Chinese hamster cell lines that constitutively express various levels of the wild-type HSP27 (HU27 cells) or a nonphosphorylatable form of human HSP27 (HU27pm3 cells) were developed. In contrast to HU27 cells, which showed increased survival after heat shock, HU27pm3 cells showed only slightly enhanced survival. Evidence is presented that stabilization of microfilaments is a major target of the protective function of HSP27. In the HU27pm3 cells, the microfilaments were thermosensitized compared with those in the control cells, whereas wild-type HSP27 caused an increased stability of these structures in HU27 cells. HU27 but not HU27pm3 cells were highly resistant to cytochalasin D treatment compared with control cells. Moreover, in cells treated with cytochalasin D, wild-type HSP27 but not the phosphorylated form of HSP27 accelerated the reappearance of actin filaments. The mutations in human HSP27 had no effect on heat shock-induced change in solubility and cellular localization of the protein, indicating that phosphorylation was not involved in these processes. However, induction of HSP27 phosphorylation by stressing agents or mitogens caused a reduction in the multimeric size of the wild-type protein, an effect which was not observed with the mutant protein. We propose that early during stress, phosphorylation-induced conformational changes in the HSP27 oligomers regulate the activity of the protein at the level of microfilament dynamics, resulting in both enhanced stability and accelerated recovery of the filaments. The level of protection provided by HSP27 during heat shock may thus represent the contribution of better maintenance of actin filament integrity to overall cell survival.
Mutations in HspB8, a member of the B group of heat shock proteins (Hsp), have been associated with human neuromuscular disorders. However, the exact function of HspB8 is not yet clear. We previously demonstrated that overexpression of HspB8 in cultured cells prevents the accumulation of aggregation-prone proteins such as the polyglutamine protein Htt43Q. Here we report that HspB8 forms a stable complex with Bag3 in cells and that the formation of this complex is essential for the activity of HspB8. Bag3 overexpression resulted in the accelerated degradation of Htt43Q, whereas Bag3 knockdown prevented HspB8-induced Htt43Q degradation. Additionally, depleting Bag3 caused a reduction in the endogenous levels of LC3-II, a key molecule involved in macroautophagy, whereas overexpressing Bag3 or HspB8 stimulated the formation LC3-II. These results suggested that the HspB8-Bag3 complex might stimulate the degradation of Htt43Q by macroautophagy. This was confirmed by the observation that treatments with macroautophagy inhibitors significantly decreased HspB8-and Bag3-induced degradation of Htt43Q. We conclude that the HspB8 activity is intrinsically dependent on Bag3, a protein that may facilitate the disposal of doomed proteins by stimulating macroautophagy.The intracellular aggregation of proteins, whether it occurs as a result of proteotoxic stress or genetic mutations, represents a major threat in the crowded environment of the cell. Consequently, efficient mechanisms of protein quality control exist involving molecular chaperones such as Hsp70 and Hsp90, which can recognize and bind to unfolded proteins thereby preventing their aggregation (1-4). The fate of the chaperone substrates is determined by associated co-chaperones. CHIP, a ubiquitin E3 ligase and Bag1, a member of the Bag family of proteins (Bag1-Bag6) that contains a ubiquitin-like domain, associate with Hsp70 and facilitate the targeting of Hsp70 substrates to the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (5, 6). In contrast, by associating with Hsp70, Bag2 hampers CHIP activity and favors substrate renaturation (7,8), whereas Bag3 prevents Hsp70 substrate degradation and causes ubiquitylated substrate accumulation (9).The role of chaperone complexes containing Hsp70 has been experimentally highlighted in a range of neurodegenerative disorders characterized by the accumulation of protein aggregates (10 -14). However, it is within the HspB group of heat shock proteins (also known as small heat shock proteins) that mutations have first been associated with human diseases (15). We previously showed that HspB8 (H11/Hsp22), a member of this family, has chaperone activity in vivo toward Htt43Q, a pathogenic form of huntingtin that contains an expanded polyglutamine stretch making the protein prone to aggregation. Overexpression of HspB8 but not two closely related family members, HspB1 (Hsp27) or HspB5 (␣B-crystallin), accelerated the degradation of Htt43Q and prevented both aggregation and formation of inclusion bodies (16). A similar chaperone activity was observed usi...
Abstract. Heat shock induces in cells the synthesis of specific proteins called heat shock proteins (HSPs) and a transient state of thermotolerance. The putative role of one of the HSPs, HSP27, as a protective molecule during thermal stress has been directly assessed by measuring the resistance to hyperthermia of Chinese hamster and mouse cells transfected with the human HSP27 gene contained in plasmid pHS2711. One-and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of [3H]leucineand [32P]orthophosphate-labeled proteins, coupled with immunological analysis using Ha27Ab and Hu27Ab, two rabbit antisera that specifically recognize the hamster and the human HSP27 protein respectively, were used to monitor expression and inducibility of the transfected and endogenous proteins. The human HSP27 gene cloned in pHS2711 is constitutively expressed in rodent cells, resulting in accumulation of the human HSP27 and all phosphorylated derivatives. No modification of the basal or heat-induced expression of endogenous HSPs is detected. The presence of additional HSP27 protein provides immediate protection against heat shock administered 48 h after transfection and confers a permanent thermoresistant phenotype to stable transfectant Chinese hamster and mouse cell lines. Mild heat treatment of the transfected cells results in an induction of the full complement of the endogenous heat shock proteins and a small increase in thermoresistance, but the level attained did not surpass that of heat-induced thermotolerant control cells. These results indicate that elevated levels of HSP27 is sufficient to give protection from thermal killing. It is concluded that HSP27 plays a major role in the increased thermal resistance acquired by cells after exposure to HSP inducers.
. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, two domains were identified that were responsible for HSP27 intermolecular interactions. One domain was insensitive to phosphorylation and corresponded to the C-terminal ␣-crystallin domain. The other domain was sensitive to serine 90 phosphorylation and was located in the N-terminal region of the protein. Fusion of this N-terminal domain to firefly luciferase conferred luciferase with the capacity to form multimers that dissociated into monomers upon phosphorylation. A deletion within this domain of residues Arg 5 -Tyr 23 , which contains a WDPF motif found in most proteins of the small heat shock protein family, yielded a protein that forms only phosphorylation-insensitive dimers. We propose that HSP27 forms stable dimers through the ␣-crystallin domain. These dimers further multimerize through intermolecular interactions mediated by the phosphorylation-sensitive N-terminal domain.
Heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) confers cellular protection against a variety of cytotoxic stresses and also against physiological stresses associated with growth arrest or receptor-mediated apoptosis. Phosphorylation modulates the activity of HSP27 by causing a major change in the supramolecular organization of the protein, which shifts from oligomers to dimers. Here we show that phosphorylated dimers of HSP27 interact with Daxx, a mediator of Fas-induced apoptosis, preventing the interaction of Daxx with both Ask1 and Fas and blocking Daxx-mediated apoptosis. No such inhibition was observed with an HSP27 phosphorylation mutant that is only expressed as oligomers or when apoptosis was induced by transfection of a Daxx mutant lacking its HSP27 binding domain. HSP27 expression had no effect on Fas-induced FADD-and caspase-dependent apoptosis. However, HSP27 blocked Fas-induced translocation of Daxx from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and Fasinduced Daxx-and Ask1-dependent apoptosis. The observations revealed a new level of regulation of the Fas pathway and suggest a mechanism for the phosphorylation-dependent protective function of HSP27 during stress and differentiation.
The family of small heat shock proteins (sHsp) is composed of 10 members in mammals, four of which are found mutated in diseases associated with the accumulation of protein aggregates. Though many sHsp have demonstrated molecular chaperone activity in vitro in cell-free conditions, their activity in vivo in the normal cellular context remains unclear. In the present study, we investigated the capacity of the sHsp, HspB8/Hsp22, to prevent protein aggregation in the cells using the polyglutamine protein Htt43Q as a model. In control conditions, Htt43Q accumulated in perinuclear inclusions composed of SDS-insoluble aggregates. Co-transfected with Htt43Q, HspB8 became occasionally trapped within the inclusions; however, in most cells, HspB8 blocked inclusion formation. Biochemical analyses indicated that HspB8 inhibited the accumulation of SDS-insoluble Htt43Q as efficiently as Hsp40 which was taken as a positive control. Htt43Q then accumulated in the SDS-soluble fraction, provided that protein degradation was blocked by proteasome and autophagy inhibitors. In contrast, the other sHsp Hsp27/HspB1 and alphaB-crystallin/HspB5 had no effect. This suggested that HspB8 functions as a molecular chaperone, maintaining Htt43Q in a soluble state competent for rapid degradation. Analyses of Hsp27-HspB8 chimeric proteins indicated that the C-terminal domain of HspB8 contains the specific sequence necessary for chaperone activity. Missense mutations in this domain at lysine 141, which are found in human motor neuropathies, significantly reduced the chaperone activity of the protein. A decrease in the HspB8 chaperone activity may therefore contribute to the development of these diseases.
Heat-shock protein 27 (HSP27) is a major target of phosphorylation upon cell stimulation with a variety of agents and has been suggested to have a phosphorylation-regulated function at the level of actin filaments. Here we investigated comparatively the mechanisms of HSP27 phosphorylation by oxidative stresses, exposures to tumor necrosis factor (TNF), heat shock and growth factors. Extracts of Chinese hamster or human cells exposed to H202, xanthine/xanthine oxidase, menadione or TNF contained up to 15-fold more HSP27 kinase activity than comparable extracts obtained from control cells. Induction of HSP27 kinase activity by TNF or H,O, was completely inhibited by first treating the cells with the antioxidant N-acetyl-L-cysteine, suggesting that generation of reactive oxygen metabolites was the key triggering element of this induction. In contrast, prior treatment with acetylcysteine had no or little effect on the induction by thrombin, serum and heat shock. The kinase activity in extracts of cells stimulated by healt shock, Hz02, sodium arsenite, TNF or growth factors was identified by in-gel renaturation and purified -8000-fold by sequential chromatography. In all cases, the induced kinase activity was entirely associated with two polypeptides of 45 kDa and 54 kDa, identified as mitogen-activated-protein kinaseactivated protein (MAPKAP) kinase-2 based on its reactivation in vitro by 42/44-kDa MAP kinases, its antigenic properties and its substrate specificity. The 45/54-kDa HSP27 kinase may play an important role in the cell response to oxidative stress. Overexpression of the wild-type HSP27 but not of a nonphosphorylatable form of human HSP27 in Chinese hamster cells conferred resistance to actin fragmentation by oxidative stress generated by H,O,. It is concluded that activation of the 45/54-kDa HSP27 kinase is a coimmon mechanism of HSP27 phosphorylation to which converge both oxyradical-dependent and oxyradical-independent pathways and which may participate in a homeostatic response to stress at the level of actin microfilament.
Despite the importance of the stress-activated protein kinase pathways in cell death and survival, it is unclear how stressful stimuli lead to their activation. In the case of heat shock, the existence of a specific mechanism of activation has been evidenced, but the molecular nature of this pathway is undefined. Here, we found that Ask1 (apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1), an upstream activator of the stress-activated protein kinase p38 during exposure to oxidative stress and other stressful stimuli, was also activated by heat shock. Ask1 activity was required for p38 activation since overexpression of a kinase dead mutant of Ask1, Ask1(K709M), inhibited heat shock-induced p38 activation. The activation of Ask1 by oxidative stress involves the oxidation of thioredoxin, an endogenous inhibitor of Ask1. A different activation mechanism takes place during heat shock. In contrast to p38 induction by H 2 O 2 , induction by heat shock was not antagonized by pretreatment with the antioxidant Nacetyl-L-cysteine or by overexpressing thioredoxin and was not accompanied by the dissociation of thioredoxin from Ask1. Instead, heat shock caused the dissociation of glutathione S-transferase Mu1-1 (GSTM1-1) from Ask1 and overexpression of GSTM1-1-inhibited induction of p38 by heat shock. We concluded that because of an alternative regulation by the two distinct repressors thioredoxin and GSTM1-1, Ask1 constitutes the converging point of the heat shock and oxidative stress-sensing pathways that lead to p38 activation.Heat shock affects all proteins and structures but nevertheless produces a highly specific stress response aimed at protecting the cells and re-establishing homeostasis. In addition to the well characterized transcriptional activation of the genes coding for heat shock proteins (1-3), within minutes heat shock activates a major signal transduction pathway involving the stress-activated protein kinase p38 and leading to the phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) (4, 5). Phosphorylation of HSP27 activates a protective function, which may result from the known phosphorylation-modulated function of the protein at the level of the actin microfilaments (6 -8) or from other described protective activities, either as a chaperone (9 -11) or as an inhibitor of apoptotic processes (12)(13)(14). Activation of the p38 pathway and phosphorylation of HSP27 occurs within minutes at elevated temperature and constitutes a very tightly regulated response (15). After a mild heat shock, cells becomes refractory to reinduction of p38 activity by a second heat shock but remained fully responsive to reinduction by other stresses, cytokines, or growth factors (15). The specificity of this desensitization reinforces the existence of a highly specific heat shock-sensing pathway upstream of p38. Despite its importance for cell survival, the signaling components and the molecular mechanism leading to heat shock-induced p38 activation are unknown.Little is known about the mechanisms of activation of the stress-sensitive pathways. I...
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