Mizzen L A, Welch W J
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York 11724.
J Cell Biol. 1988 Apr;106(4):1105-16. doi: 10.1083/jcb.106.4.1105.
Exposure of mammalian cells to a nonlethal heat-shock treatment, followed by a recovery period at 37 degrees C, results in increased cell survival after a subsequent and otherwise lethal heat-shock treatment. Here we characterize this phenomenon, termed acquired thermotolerance, at the level of translation. In a number of different mammalian cell lines given a severe 45 degrees C/30-min shock and then returned to 37 degrees C, protein synthesis was completely inhibited for as long as 5 h. Upon resumption of translational activity, there was a marked induction of heat-shock (or stress) protein synthesis, which continued for several hours. In contrast, cells first made thermotolerant (by a pretreatment consisting of a 43 degrees C/1.5-h shock and further recovery at 37 degrees C) and then presented with the 45 degrees C/30-min shock exhibited considerably less translational inhibition and an overall reduction in the amount of subsequent stress protein synthesis. The acquisition and duration of such "translational tolerance" was correlated with the expression, accumulation, and relative half-lives of the major stress proteins of 72 and 73 kD. Other agents that induce the synthesis of the stress proteins, such as sodium arsenite, similarly resulted in the acquisition of translational tolerance. The probable role of the stress proteins in the acquisition of translational tolerance was further indicated by the inability of the amino acid analogue, L-azetidine 2-carboxylic acid, an inducer of nonfunctional stress proteins, to render cells translationally tolerant. If, however, analogue-treated cells were allowed to recover in normal medium, and hence produce functional stress proteins, full translational tolerance was observed. Finally, we present data indicating that the 72- and 73-kD stress proteins, in contrast to the other major stress proteins (of 110, 90, and 28 kD), are subject to strict regulation in the stressed cell. Quantitation of 72- and 73-kD synthesis after heat-shock treatment under a number of conditions revealed that "titration" of 72/73-kD synthesis in response to stress may represent a mechanism by which the cell monitors its local growth environment.
将哺乳动物细胞进行非致死性热休克处理,随后在37℃恢复一段时间,结果显示在后续进行的原本致死性热休克处理后,细胞存活率提高。在此,我们从翻译水平对这种称为获得性耐热性的现象进行了表征。在许多不同的哺乳动物细胞系中,给予45℃/30分钟的严重热休克处理后再回到37℃,蛋白质合成会被完全抑制长达5小时。翻译活性恢复后,热休克(或应激)蛋白合成显著诱导,并持续数小时。相比之下,先使细胞产生耐热性(通过43℃/1.5小时的热休克预处理并在37℃进一步恢复),然后再给予45℃/30分钟热休克处理的细胞,其翻译抑制明显减少,随后应激蛋白合成量总体降低。这种“翻译耐受性”的获得和持续时间与72和73kD主要应激蛋白的表达、积累及相对半衰期相关。其他诱导应激蛋白合成的试剂,如亚砷酸钠,同样会导致翻译耐受性的获得。氨基酸类似物L -氮杂环丁烷-2-羧酸是无功能应激蛋白的诱导剂,它无法使细胞产生翻译耐受性,这进一步表明了应激蛋白在获得翻译耐受性中的可能作用。然而,如果用类似物处理的细胞在正常培养基中恢复,从而产生功能性应激蛋白,则可观察到完全的翻译耐受性。最后,我们提供的数据表明,与其他主要应激蛋白(110、90和28kD)相比,72和73kD应激蛋白在应激细胞中受到严格调控。在多种条件下对热休克处理后72和73kD合成的定量分析表明,应激时72/73kD合成的“滴定”可能是细胞监测其局部生长环境的一种机制。