Vogel J L, Parsell D A, Lindquist S
Laboratory of Viral Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Curr Biol. 1995 Mar 1;5(3):306-17. doi: 10.1016/s0960-9822(95)00061-3.
The heat-shock protein Hsp104 plays a crucial role in the survival of cells exposed to high temperatures and other severe stresses, but its specific functions and the biological pathways on which it operates have been unclear. Indeed, very little is known about the specific cellular processes in which any of the heat-shock proteins acts to affect thermotolerance. One essential process that is particularly sensitive to heat in many organisms is the splicing of intervening sequences from mRNA precursors.
We have examined the role of Hsp104 in the repair of splicing after disruption by heat shock. When splicing in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was disrupted by a brief heat shock, it recovered much more rapidly in wild-type strains than in strains containing hsp104 mutations. Constitutive expression of Hsp104 promoted the recovery of heat-damaged splicing in the absence of other protein synthesis, but did not protect splicing from the initial disruption, suggesting that Hsp104 functions to repair splicing after heat damage rather than to prevent the initial damage. A modest reduction in the recovery of splicing after heat shock in an hsp70 mutant suggested that Hsp70 may also function in the repair of splicing. The roles of Hsp104 and Hsp70 were confirmed by the ability of the purified proteins to restore splicing in extracts that had been heat-inactivated in vitro. Together, these two proteins were able to restore splicing to a greater degree than could be accomplished by an optimal concentration of either protein alone.
Our findings provide the first demonstration of the roles of heat-shock proteins in a biological process that is known to be particularly sensitive to heat in vivo. The results support previous genetic arguments that the Hsp104 and Hsp70 proteins have different, but related, functions in protecting cells from the toxic effects of high temperatures. Because Hsp104 and Hsp70 are able to function in vitro, after the heat-damaged substrate or substrates have been generated, neither protein is required to bind to its target(s) during heating in order to effect repair.
热休克蛋白Hsp104在暴露于高温和其他严重应激的细胞存活中起着关键作用,但其具体功能以及所作用的生物学途径尚不清楚。实际上,对于任何热休克蛋白影响耐热性的具体细胞过程知之甚少。在许多生物体中,一个对热特别敏感的重要过程是从mRNA前体中剪接间隔序列。
我们研究了Hsp104在热休克破坏后剪接修复中的作用。当通过短暂热休克破坏出芽酵母酿酒酵母中的剪接时,野生型菌株中的剪接恢复比含有hsp104突变的菌株快得多。在没有其他蛋白质合成的情况下,Hsp104的组成型表达促进了热损伤剪接的恢复,但不能保护剪接受初始破坏,这表明Hsp104的功能是在热损伤后修复剪接,而不是防止初始损伤。hsp70突变体热休克后剪接恢复的适度降低表明Hsp70也可能在剪接修复中起作用。纯化的蛋白质能够在体外热灭活的提取物中恢复剪接,从而证实了Hsp104和Hsp70的作用。这两种蛋白质一起能够比单独使用任何一种蛋白质的最佳浓度更有效地恢复剪接。
我们的研究结果首次证明了热休克蛋白在体内已知对热特别敏感的生物学过程中的作用。结果支持了先前的遗传学观点,即Hsp104和Hsp70蛋白在保护细胞免受高温毒性作用方面具有不同但相关的功能。由于Hsp104和Hsp70能够在体外发挥作用,在产生热损伤的底物之后,两种蛋白质在加热过程中都不需要与其靶标结合来实现修复。