4.6 Article

Dynamic processes that reflect anti-apoptotic strategies set up by HspB1 (Hsp27)

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 316, Issue 9, Pages 1535-1552

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2010.03.006

Keywords

Hsp27; HspB1; Chaperone; Apoptosis; Oligomerization; Phosphorylation

Funding

  1. Region Rhone-Alpes
  2. Association Francaise pour les Myopathies (AFM)

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Human HspB1 (also denoted Hsp27) is an oligomeric anti-apoptotic protein that has tumorigenic and metastatic roles. To approach the structural organizations of HspB1 that are active in response to apoptosis inducers acting through different pathways, we have analyzed the relative protective efficiency induced by this protein as well its localization, oligomerization and phosphorylation. HeLa cells, that constitutively express high levels of HspB1 were treated with either etoposide, Fas agonist antibody, staurosporine or cytochalas in D. Variability in HspB1 efficiency to interfere with the different apoptotic transduction pathways induced by these agents were detected. Moreover, inducer-specific dynamic changes in HspB1 localization, native size and phosphorylation were observed, that differed from those observed after heat shock. Etoposide and Fas treatments gradually shifted HspB1 towards large but differently phosphorylated oligomeric structures. In contrast, staurosporine and cytochalas in D induced the rapid but transient formation of small oligomers before large structures were formed. These events correlated with inducer-specific phosphorylations of HspB1. Of interest, the formation of small oligomers in response to staurosporine and cytochalasin D was time correlated with the rapid disruption of F-actin. The subsequent, or gradual in the case of etoposide and Fas, formation of large oligomeric structures was a later event concomitant with the early phase of caspase activation. These observations support the hypothesis that HspB1 has the ability, through specific changes in its structural organization, to adapt and interfere at several levels with challenges triggered by different signal transduction pathways upstream of the execution phase of apoptosis. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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