| Literature DB >> 22964629 |
Emmanuel de Billy, Jon Travers, Paul Workman.
Abstract
The transcription factor heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) is the master regulator of the heat shock response. It is crucial for cell homeostasis and implicated in aging, neurodegenerative disease and cancer. Although induction by HSF1 of the expression of molecular chaperones and other regulators of protein quality control, both folding and degradation, is well established, the precise and detailed transcriptional network that HSF1 regulates in cancer is poorly understood. An important new study identifies an HSF1-regulated transcriptional program in highly malignant cells that is surprisingly distinct from the traditional heat shock response. The results have significant implications for our molecular understanding of cancer and the development of new therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22964629 PMCID: PMC3478452 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Distinct and overlapping genes are regulated by activation of the heat shock response when induced by cancer versus other cell stresses
Mendillo et al [2] show that constitutive activation of HSF1 in cancer cells leads to specific binding at promoter and distal sites, resulting in alteration of expression of genes that are distinct from (as well as those overlapping with) the canonical heat shock genes with which the transcription factor is classically associated. Oncogenic stress likely contributes to selection of target genes by HSF1 via several non-mutually exclusive mechanisms. These include changes at the epigenetic level through which HSF1 binding sites are made accessible in cancer cells, together with combinations of different post-translational modifications (depicted by small red and green circles on HSF1) from specific stress-related pathways activated in malignancy. These signals are likely integrated with each other to allow differential gene selection depending on the nature of the stress. The mechanisms provide interesting scope for pharmacological intervention to direct HSF1 activity specifically towards a non-malignant transcriptional program, thereby increasing anticancer activity and therapeutic index.