HSF1 activation
HSF1 is constitutively present in the cell. In the absence of stress HSF1 is found in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus as an inactive monomer (Sarge KD et al. 1993; Mercier PA et al. 1999; Vujanac M et al. 2005). A physical or chemical proteotoxic stress rapidly induces HSF1 activation, which occurs through a multi?step process, involving HSF1 monomer-to-homotrimer transition, nuclear accumulation, and binding to a promoter element, called the heat shock element (HSE), which leads to the increase in the stress-inducible gene expression (Sarge KD et al. 1993; Baler R et al. 1998; Sonna LA et al. 2002; Shamovsky I and Nudler E 2008; Sakurai H and Enoki Y 2010; Herbomel G et al. 2013). Depending on the type of stress stimulus, the multiple events associated with HSF1 activation might be affected differently (Holmberg CI et al 2000; Bjork and Sistonen 2010).
| UniProt ID | Protein Name | Gene Symbol | Pathway Viewer |
|---|---|---|---|
| O75506 | Heat shock factor-binding protein 1 |
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| P07900 | Heat shock protein HSP 90-alpha |
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| P08238 | Heat shock protein HSP 90-beta |
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| P15927 | Replication protein A 32 kDa subunit |
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| P27694 | Replication protein A 70 kDa DNA-binding subunit |
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| P55072 | Transitional endoplasmic reticulum ATPase |
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| P62258 | 14-3-3 protein epsilon |
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| P68104 | Elongation factor 1-alpha 1 |
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| Q00613 | Heat shock factor protein 1 |
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| Q9UBN7 | Protein deacetylase HDAC6 |
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Supported by JST NBDC Grant Number JPMJND2204
Partly supported by NIH Common Fund Grant #1U01GM125267-01
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