5 resultados para HEAT STRESS

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


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The cell is continuously subjected to various forms of external and intrinsic proteindamaging stresses, including hyperthermia, pathophysiological states, as well as cell differentiation and proliferation. Proteindamaging stresses result in denaturation and improper folding of proteins, leading to the formation of toxic aggregates that are detrimental for various pathological conditions, including Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s diseases. In order to maintain protein homeostasis, cells have developed different cytoprotective mechanisms, one of which is the evolutionary well-conserved heat shock response. The heat shock response results in the expression of heat shock proteins (Hsps), which act as molecular chaperones that bind to misfolded proteins, facilitate their refolding and prevent the formation of protein aggregates. Stress-induced expression of Hsps is mediated by a family of transcription factors, the heat shock factors, HSFs. Of the four HSFs found in vertebrates, HSF1-4, HSF1 is the major stress-responsive factor that is required for the induction of the heat shock response. HSF2 cannot alone induce Hsps, but modulates the heat shock response by forming heterotrimers with HSF1. HSFs are not only involved in the heat shock response, but they have also been found to have a function in development, neurodegenerative disorders, cancer, and longevity. Therefore, insight into how HSFs are regulated is important for the understanding of both normal physiological and disease processes. The activity of HSF1 is mainly regulated by intricate post-translational modifications, whereas the activity of HSF2 is concentrationdependent. However, there is only limited understanding of how the abundance of HSF2 is regulated. This study describes two different means of how HSF2 levels are regulated. In the first study it was shown that microRNA miR-18, a member of the miR-17~92 cluster, directly regulates Hsf2 mRNA stability and thus protein levels. HSF2 has earlier been shown to play a profound role in the regulation of male germ cell maturation during the spermatogenesis. The effect on miR-18 on HSF2 was examined in vivo by transfecting intact seminiferous tubules, and it was found that inhibition of miR-18 resulted in increased HSF2 levels and modified expression of the HSF2 targets Ssty2 and Speer4a. HSF2 has earlier been reported to modulate the heat shock response by forming heterotrimers with HSF1. In the second study, it was shown that HSF2 is cleared off the Hsp70 promoter and degraded by the ubiquitinproteasome pathway upon acute stress. By silencing components of the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C), including the co-activators Cdc20 and Cdh1, it was shown that APC/C mediates the heatinduced ubiquitylation of HSF2. Furthermore, down-regulation of Cdc20 was shown to alter the expression of heat shock-responsive genes. Next, we studied if APC/C-Cdc20, which controls cell cycle progression, also regulates HSF2 during the cell cycle. We found that both HSF2 mRNA and protein levels decreased during mitosis in several but not all human cell lines, indicating that HSF2 has a function in mitotic cells. Interestingly, although transcription is globally repressed during mitosis, mainly due to the displacement of RNA polymerase II and transcription factors, including HSF1, from the mitotic chromatin, HSF2 is capable of binding DNA during mitosis. Thus, during mitosis the heat shock response is impaired, leaving mitotic cells vulnerable to proteotoxic stress. However, in HSF2-deficient mitotic cells the Hsp70 promoter is accessible to both HSF1 and RNA polymerase II, allowing for stress-inducible Hsp expression to occur. As a consequence HSF2-deficient mitotic cells have a survival advantage upon acute heat stress. The results, presented in this thesis contribute to the understanding of the regulatory mechanisms of HSF2 and its function in the heat shock response in both interphase and mitotic cells.

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Heat shock factors (HSFs) are an evolutionarily well conserved family of transcription factors that coordinate stress-induced gene expression and direct versatile physiological processes in eukaryote organisms. The essentiality of HSFs for cellular homeostasis has been well demonstrated, mainly through HSF1-induced transcription of heat shock protein (HSP) genes. HSFs are important regulators of many fundamental processes such as gametogenesis, metabolic control and aging, and are involved in pathological conditions including cancer progression and neurodegenerative diseases. In each of the HSF-mediated processes, however, the detailed mechanisms of HSF family members and their complete set of target genes have remained unknown. Recently, rapid advances in chromatin studies have enabled genome-wide characterization of protein binding sites in a high resolution and in an unbiased manner. In this PhD thesis, these novel methods that base on chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) are utilized and the genome-wide target loci for HSF1 and HSF2 are identified in cellular stress responses and in developmental processes. The thesis and its original publications characterize the individual and shared target genes of HSF1 and HSF2, describe HSF1 as a potent transactivator, and discover HSF2 as an epigenetic regulator that coordinates gene expression throughout the cell cycle progression. In male gametogenesis, novel physiological functions for HSF1 and HSF2 are revealed and HSFs are demonstrated to control the expression of X- and Y-chromosomal multicopy genes in a silenced chromatin environment. In stressed human cells, HSF1 and HSF2 are shown to coordinate the expression of a wide variety of genes including genes for chaperone machinery, ubiquitin, regulators of cell cycle progression and signaling. These results highlight the importance of cell type and cell cycle phase in transcriptional responses, reveal the myriad of processes that are adjusted in a stressed cell and describe novel mechanisms that maintain transcriptional memory in mitotic cell division.

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Protein homeostasis is essential for cells to prosper and survive. Various forms of stress, such as elevated temperatures, oxidative stress, heavy metals or bacterial infections cause protein damage, which might lead to improper folding and formation of toxic protein aggregates. Protein aggregation is associated with serious pathological conditions such as Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s disease. The heat shock response is a defense mechanism that protects the cell against protein-damaging stress. Its ancient origin and high conservation among eukaryotes suggest that the response is crucial for survival. The main regulator of the heat shock response is the transcription factor heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), which induces transcription of genes encoding protective molecular chaperones. In vertebrates, a family of four HSFs exists (HSF1-4), with versatile functions not only in coping with acute stress, but also in development, longevity and cancer. Thus, knowledge of the HSFs will aid in our understanding on how cells survive suboptimal circumstances, but will also provide insights into normal physiological processes as well as diseaseassociated conditions. In this study, the function and regulation of HSF2 have been investigated. Earlier gene inactivation experiments in mice have revealed roles for HSF2 in development, particularly in corticogenesis and spermatogenesis. Here, we demonstrate that HSF2 holds a role also in the heat shock response and influences stress-induced expression of heat shock proteins. Intriguingly, DNA-binding activity of HSF2 upon stress was dependent on the presence of intact HSF1, suggesting functional interplay between HSF1 and HSF2. The underlying mechanism for this phenomenon could be configuration of heterotrimers between the two factors, a possibility that was experimentally verified. By changing the levels of HSF2, the expression of HSF1-HSF2 heterotrimer target genes was altered, implementing HSF2 as a modulator of HSF-mediated transcription. The results further indicate that HSF2 activity is dependent on its concentration, which led us to ask the question of how accurate HSF2 levels are achieved. Using mouse spermatogenesis as a model system, HSF2 was found to be under direct control of miR-18, a miRNA belonging to the miR-17~92 cluster/Oncomir-1 and whose physiological function had remained unclear. Investigations on spermatogenesis are severely hampered by the lack of cell systems that would mimic the complex differentiation processes that constitute male germ cell development. Therefore, to verify that HSF2 is regulated by miR-18 in spermatogenesis, a novel method named T-GIST (Transfection of Germ cells in Intact Seminiferous Tubules) was developed. Employing this method, the functional consequences of miR-18-mediated regulation in vivo were demonstrated; inhibition of miR- 18 led to increased expression of HSF2 and altered the expression of HSF2 target genes Ssty2 and Speer4a. Consequently, the results link miR-18 to HSF2-mediated processes such as germ cell maturation and quality control and provide miR-18 with a physiological role in gene expression during spermatogenesis.Taken together, this study presents compelling evidence that HSF2 is a transcriptional regulator in the heat shock response and establishes the concept of physical interplay between HSF2 and HSF1 and functional consequences thereof. This is also the first study describing miRNA-mediated regulation of an HSF.

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Thermal cutting methods, are commonly used in the manufacture of metal parts. Thermal cutting processes separate materials by using heat. The process can be done with or without a stream of cutting oxygen. Common processes are Oxygen, plasma and laser cutting. It depends on the application and material which cutting method is used. Numerically-controlled thermal cutting is a cost-effective way of prefabricating components. One design aim is to minimize the number of work steps in order to increase competitiveness. This has resulted in the holes and openings in plate parts manufactured today being made using thermal cutting methods. This is a problem from the fatigue life perspective because there is local detail in the as-welded state that causes a rise in stress in a local area of the plate. In a case where the static utilization of a net section is full used, the calculated linear local stresses and stress ranges are often over 2 times the material yield strength. The shakedown criteria are exceeded. Fatigue life assessment of flame-cut details is commonly based on the nominal stress method. For welded details, design standards and instructions provide more accurate and flexible methods, e.g. a hot-spot method, but these methods are not universally applied to flame cut edges. Some of the fatigue tests of flame cut edges in the laboratory indicated that fatigue life estimations based on the standard nominal stress method can give quite a conservative fatigue life estimate in cases where a high notch factor was present. This is an undesirable phenomenon and it limits the potential for minimizing structure size and total costs. A new calculation method is introduced to improve the accuracy of the theoretical fatigue life prediction method of a flame cut edge with a high stress concentration factor. Simple equations were derived by using laboratory fatigue test results, which are published in this work. The proposed method is called the modified FAT method (FATmod). The method takes into account the residual stress state, surface quality, material strength class and true stress ratio in the critical place.