Graner Michael W, Raynes Deborah A, Bigner Darell D, Guerriero Vince
Department of Pathology, and the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Cancer Sci. 2009 Oct;100(10):1870-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1349-7006.2009.01269.x. Epub 2009 Jul 1.
Chaperone proteins and heat shock proteins (HSP) are essential components of cellular protein folding systems under normal conditions; their expression and activities are upregulated during stress. Chronically stressed tumors frequently exhibit high chaperone protein levels, exploiting their anti-apoptotic mechanisms and general proteome homeostasis amidst a background of genetic instability. Co-chaperones interact with chaperones as malleable regulatory components of protein folding activity and may represent a conduit for modification of chaperone activity to the detriment of the tumor. We have initially characterized one such co-chaperone, heat shock protein 70-binding protein (HspBP) 1 from human brain tumors, their xenografts grown in immune-compromised mice, and in syngeneic murine models in immune-competent mice. Immunohistochemical analyses show HspBP1 overexpression (with unusual subcellular localizations) in patient brain tumors relative to normal brain tissue. This holds true for the xenograft and syngeneic murine tumor models. In biochemical affinity chromatography assays, HspBP1 interacts with members of the HSP70 family from brain tumor lysates and from surface-derived samples, including HSP70, glucose regulated protein (GRP)75, GRP78, and HSP110. From normal brain lysates, only heat shock cognate (HSC)70, GRP75, and HSP110 bind to HspBP1. FACS analyses indicate that HspBP1 binds to brain tumor cell surfaces, possibly via HSP70 family members, and internalizes into cells. This has implications for HspBP1 biology as well as its utility as a tumor-targeting agent. Our results suggest that HspBP1 may play a role in tumor (dys)regulation of chaperone proteins, and that HspBP1 may have extracellular roles with therapeutic implications.
伴侣蛋白和热休克蛋白(HSP)是正常条件下细胞蛋白质折叠系统的重要组成部分;在应激过程中,它们的表达和活性会上调。长期处于应激状态的肿瘤通常表现出伴侣蛋白水平升高,在基因不稳定的背景下利用其抗凋亡机制和维持蛋白质组的整体稳态。共伴侣蛋白作为蛋白质折叠活性的可塑性调节成分与伴侣蛋白相互作用,可能是改变伴侣蛋白活性从而对肿瘤产生不利影响的一条途径。我们最初对一种这样的共伴侣蛋白——来自人脑肿瘤、在免疫缺陷小鼠体内生长的异种移植瘤以及免疫健全小鼠的同基因小鼠模型中的热休克蛋白70结合蛋白(HspBP)1进行了表征。免疫组织化学分析显示,与正常脑组织相比,患者脑肿瘤中HspBP1过表达(具有不寻常的亚细胞定位)。在异种移植和同基因小鼠肿瘤模型中也是如此。在生化亲和色谱分析中,HspBP1与来自脑肿瘤裂解物和表面来源样本的HSP70家族成员相互作用,包括HSP70、葡萄糖调节蛋白(GRP)75、GRP78和HSP110。从正常脑裂解物中,只有热休克同源蛋白(HSC)70、GRP75和HSP110与HspBP1结合。荧光激活细胞分选分析表明,HspBP1可能通过HSP70家族成员与脑肿瘤细胞表面结合,并内化进入细胞。这对HspBP1的生物学特性及其作为肿瘤靶向剂的效用都有影响。我们的结果表明,HspBP1可能在肿瘤对伴侣蛋白的(失调)调节中发挥作用,并且HspBP1可能具有具有治疗意义的细胞外作用。