Calderwood Stuart K, Murshid Ayesha, Prince Thomas
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Gerontology. 2009;55(5):550-8. doi: 10.1159/000225957. Epub 2009 Jun 18.
Aging can be thought of as the collision between destructive processes that act on cells and organs over the lifetime and the responses that promote homeostasis, vitality and longevity. However, the precise mechanisms that determine the rates of aging in organisms are not known.
Macromolecules such as proteins are continuously exposed to potential damaging agents that can cause loss of molecular function and depletion of cell populations over the lifetime of essential organs. One of the key homeostatic responses involved in maintaining longevity is the induction of heat shock proteins (HSPs), a conserved reaction to damaged intracellular proteins. We aim to discuss how the interplay between protein damage and its repair or removal from the cell may influence longevity and aging.
We have reviewed experiments carried out in mammalian and non-mammalian organisms on molecular chaperones and the transcription factor (heat shock factor 1, HSF1) responsible for their expression. We have discussed mechanisms through which these molecules are regulated in cells, respond to stimuli that enhance longevity and become impaired during aging.
The transcription factor HSF1 initiates the prolific induction of HSP when cells are exposed to protein damage. HSPs are molecular chaperones that protect the proteome by folding denatured polypeptides and promoting the degradation of severely damaged proteins. Activation of HSF1 is coupled functionally to fundamental pathways of longevity and orchestrates the evasion of aging through HSP induction and antagonism of protein aggregation. In addition to mediating protein quality control, some HSPs such as Hsp27 and Hsp70 directly protect cells against damage-induced entry into death pathways. However, the heat shock response declines in potency over the lifetime, and enfeeblement of the response contributes to aging by permitting the emergence of protein aggregation diseases, reduction in cellular vigor and decreased longevity.
Molecular chaperones play an important role in the deterrence of protein damage during aging and their expression is required for longevity. Chemical stimulation of HSP synthesis might therefore be a significant strategy in future design of antiaging pharmaceuticals.
衰老可被视为在生物体一生中作用于细胞和器官的破坏过程与促进体内平衡、活力和长寿的反应之间的碰撞。然而,决定生物体衰老速率的精确机制尚不清楚。
诸如蛋白质等大分子在基本器官的整个生命周期中持续暴露于可能导致分子功能丧失和细胞群体耗竭的潜在损伤因子。参与维持长寿的关键体内平衡反应之一是热休克蛋白(HSPs)的诱导,这是对受损细胞内蛋白质的一种保守反应。我们旨在探讨蛋白质损伤与其从细胞中修复或清除之间的相互作用如何影响长寿和衰老。
我们回顾了在哺乳动物和非哺乳动物生物体中进行的关于分子伴侣及其表达所涉及的转录因子(热休克因子1,HSF1)的实验。我们讨论了这些分子在细胞中如何被调控、对延长寿命的刺激作出反应以及在衰老过程中功能受损的机制。
当细胞暴露于蛋白质损伤时,转录因子HSF1启动HSP的大量诱导。HSPs是分子伴侣蛋白,通过折叠变性多肽和促进严重受损蛋白质的降解来保护蛋白质组。HSF1的激活在功能上与长寿的基本途径相关联,并通过HSP诱导和蛋白质聚集的拮抗作用来协调衰老的规避。除了介导蛋白质质量控制外,一些HSPs如Hsp27和Hsp70还直接保护细胞免受损伤诱导的死亡途径。然而,热休克反应在整个生命周期中效力下降,反应减弱通过允许蛋白质聚集疾病的出现、细胞活力降低和寿命缩短而导致衰老。
分子伴侣蛋白在衰老过程中对蛋白质损伤的抑制中起重要作用,其表达是长寿所必需的。因此,化学刺激HSP合成可能是未来抗衰老药物设计中的一项重要策略。