Repression motif in HSF1 regulated by phosphorylation.


Journal

Cellular signalling
ISSN: 1873-3913
Titre abrégé: Cell Signal
Pays: England
ID NLM: 8904683

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
10 2023
Historique:
received: 20 01 2023
revised: 14 07 2023
accepted: 16 07 2023
medline: 28 8 2023
pubmed: 20 7 2023
entrez: 19 7 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) is a transcription factor that itself is a sensor for stress and integrates various intrinsic or environmental stress sensing pathways. Thus HSF1 orchestrates the heat shock response (HSR) by translating these pathways into a distinct transcriptional program that aids the cells to cope with and adapt to proteotoxic stress. Although heavily researched the regulation of HSF1 activation is still not completely understood. A conserved reaction to stress is the hyperphosphorylation of the otherwise confined constitutive phosphorylated HSF1. Therefore, this stress specific phosphorylation is believed to be involved in the regulatory mechanism and hence, was and is focus of many studies, ascribing various effects to single phosphorylation sites. To gain additional insight into effects of phosphorylation, HSF1 carrying amino acid substitutions on up to 18 amino acids were tested for their transactivation potential on an HSR reporter plasmid. A pattern of eleven phosphor-mimicking and diminishing amino acid substitutions on well-known phosphorylation sites of HSF1 were introduced to produce transcriptional active [11 M(+)] or repressed [11 M(-)] phenotypes. It could be confirmed that heat activates HSF1 regardless of phosphorylation. Distinct cellular stress, obtained by chemical HSR inducers or mimicked by a constitutively active HSF1, showed clear differences in the activation potential of HSF1-11 M(+) and 11 M(-). Further refinement to the single amino acid level identified the S303/307 double-phosphorylation motif, wherein phosphorylation of S303 was sole responsible for the repressing effect. The effect could be reproduced in different cell lines and is not entirely based on degradation. A small repression motif could be dissociated from the HSF1 context, which is still capable of repressing the background transcription of a specifically designed reporter plasmid. Taken together these results indicate, that besides already described mechanisms of pS303/307 mediated repression of HSF1 activation, an additional mechanism repressing the transcriptional output of the entire HSE containing promoter is mediated by this small repressive motif.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37468051
pii: S0898-6568(23)00227-9
doi: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2023.110813
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

DNA-Binding Proteins 0
Heat Shock Transcription Factors 0
Transcription Factors 0
HSF1 protein, human 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

110813

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Auteurs

Stefan Gabriel (S)

Department of Applied Life Sciences, University of Applied Sciences, FH Campus Wien, Favoritenstraße 222, A-1100 Vienna, Austria.

Thomas Czerny (T)

Department of Applied Life Sciences, University of Applied Sciences, FH Campus Wien, Favoritenstraße 222, A-1100 Vienna, Austria.

Elisabeth Riegel (E)

Department of Applied Life Sciences, University of Applied Sciences, FH Campus Wien, Favoritenstraße 222, A-1100 Vienna, Austria. Electronic address: elisabeth.riegel@fh-campuswien.ac.at.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH