| Literature DB >> 24212658 |
Aurelie De Thonel1, Valerie Mezger, Carmen Garrido.
Abstract
Heat Shock Factors (HSF) form a family of transcription factors (four in mammals) which were named according to the discovery of their activation by a heat shock. HSFs trigger the expression of genes encoding Heat Shock Proteins (HSPs) that function as molecular chaperones, contributing to establish a cytoprotective state to various proteotoxic stresses and in pathological conditions. Increasing evidence indicates that this ancient transcriptional protective program acts genome-widely and performs unexpected functions in the absence of experimentally defined stress. Indeed, HSFs are able to re-shape cellular pathways controlling longevity, growth, metabolism and development. The most well studied HSF, HSF1, has been found at elevated levels in tumors with high metastatic potential and is associated with poor prognosis. This is partly explained by the above-mentioned cytoprotective (HSP-dependent) function that may enable cancer cells to adapt to the initial oncogenic stress and to support malignant transformation. Nevertheless, HSF1 operates as major multifaceted enhancers of tumorigenesis through, not only the induction of classical heat shock genes, but also of "non-classical" targets. Indeed, in cancer cells, HSF1 regulates genes involved in core cellular functions including proliferation, survival, migration, protein synthesis, signal transduction, and glucose metabolism, making HSF1 a very attractive target in cancer therapy. In this review, we describe the different physiological roles of HSFs as well as the recent discoveries in term of non-cogenic potential of these HSFs, more specifically associated to the activation of "non-classical" HSF target genes. We also present an update on the compounds with potent HSF1-modulating activity of potential interest as anti-cancer therapeutic agents.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 24212658 PMCID: PMC3756408 DOI: 10.3390/cancers3011158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1.Structure of Heat Shock Factors (HSFs).
HSF main characteristics.
| Human, Mouse, Chicken | Human, Mouse, Chicken | Chicken, Mouse | Human, Mouse, Chicken | |
| NC: Monomer | HS: Dimer-heterotrimers | NC and HS: Dimer | NC and HS: Trimer | |
| Mainly | Not heat-responsive Repression of hsp genes in ectopic expression experiments | |||
| Oogenesis, maternal factor, development and maintenance of germ, ciliated and immune cells | Brain and gametogenesis development | ND | Development and maintenance of sensory organs | |
| Ubiquitous | Ubiquitous | Ubiquitous | Tissue specific (heart, brain, skeletal muscle, and pancreas) |
NC: Normal conditions; HS: Heat shock; ND: Not determined.
HSF regulation in cancer.
| HSF1 | HRGβ | Increase HSF1 expression => activation of LDH-A (glycolytic enzyme) and the formation of the complex HSF1/MTA1 (prometastasic) |
| HSF1 | TC1 (Wnt Signaling) | Increases HSF1 expression in gastro-intestinal cancer => tumor aggressiveness |
| HSF1 | GSK3 | Inhibits HSF1 activity-GSK3 is inhibited in breast cancer |
| HSF2 | OncomiR18 | Inhibits HSF2 expression in spermatogenesis |
| HSF4 | DUSP26 | Inhibits HSF4 activation induced by MAPK |
| HSF3 | c-Myb | Induces HSF3 expression |
Figure 2.HSF1 potential roles in cancer. Schematic model of the role of HSF1 in cancer transformation: HSF1 activity is hijacked by several oncogenes or mutated tumor suppressors (represented by dashed arrows) allowing activation of a set of genes involved in cancer development, i.e., proliferation and anchorage independent growth, tumor maintenance, anti-apoptotic signaling, migration/metastasis, aneuploidy and probably other mechanisms, including non-transcriptional mechanisms related to the chromatin modification and genomic instability. Notably, there is growing evidence about the role of HSF2 and HSF4 in tumorigenesis since they are directly connected to different cancer related genes (FGF, cFos, Proteasome subunits). The double arrow represents the crosstalk existing between HSFs.