Search results for "heat shock"

showing 10 items of 303 documents

Heat shock proteins as danger signals for cancer detection

2011

First discovered in 1962, heat shock proteins (HSPs) are highly studied with about 35,500 publications on the subject to date. HSPs are highly conserved, function as molecular chaperones for a large panel of “client” proteins and have strong cytoprotective properties. Induced by many different stress signals, they promote cell survival in adverse conditions. Therefore, their roles have been investigated in several conditions and pathologies where HSPs accumulate, such as in cancer. Among the diverse mammalian HSPs, some members share several features that may qualify them as cancer biomarkers. This review focuses mainly on three inducible HSPs: HSP27, HPS70, and HSP90. Our survey of recent …

Cancer Researchendocrine systemdetectionchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaCancer detectionReview ArticleBioinformaticsdanger signallcsh:RC254-28203 medical and health sciencesstress0302 clinical medicineHsp27Heat shock proteinMedicine030304 developmental biologyCancer0303 health sciencesbiologyHeat shock proteinbusiness.industryCancerhemic and immune systemsmedicine.diseaselcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensHsp903. Good healthBiomarker (cell)Oncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisbiological sciencesbiology.proteinbiomarkerCancer biomarkersbusinessFunction (biology)Frontiers in Oncology
researchProduct

Do not stress, just differentiate: role of stress proteins in hematopoiesis

2015

Hematopoiesis permits the constant regeneration of the blood system and is a permanent example of cell differentiation. Defects in its tight regulation can lead to either cell death or abnormal proliferation and may translate into multiple types of blood disorders, including leukemia. Heat shock proteins (HSPs), the expression of which is controlled by heat shock factors (HSFs, currently four known members),1 are a set of highly conserved proteins induced in response to a wide variety of physiological and environmental stress. HSP/HSF overexpression or mislocalization has been described in many cancers, particularly in hematology, and other diseases. Therefore, the involvement of HSFs/HSPs …

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyCellular differentiationImmunologyBiologyMiceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceHeat Shock Transcription FactorsInternal medicineHeat shock proteinmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsRNA MessengerHeat shockTranscription factorHeat-Shock ProteinsHematologyCell DifferentiationNews and CommentaryCell BiologyHematopoiesisCell biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsHeat shock factorHaematopoiesisCaspasesHSP60Heat-Shock ResponseTranscription FactorsCell Death & Disease
researchProduct

Heat Shock Protein Vaccines Against Cancer

1993

Vaccination of mice with heat shock proteins (HSPs) derived from a tumor makes the mice resistant to the tumor from which the HSP was obtained. This phenomenon has been demonstrated with three HSPs--gp96, hsp90, and hsp70. Vaccination with HSPs also elicits antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). The specific immunogenicity of HSPs derives apparently, not from the HSPs per se, but from the peptides bound to them. These observations provide the basis for a new generation of vaccines against cancer. The HSP-based cancer vaccines circumvent two of the most intractable hurdles to cancer immunotherapy. One of them is the possibility that human cancers, like cancers of experimental anima…

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologychemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyInfectionsEpitopeMiceImmune systemAntigenCancer immunotherapyHeat shock proteinmedicineAnimalsImmunology and AllergyCytotoxic T cellHeat-Shock ProteinsPharmacologyMice Inbred BALB CMice Inbred C3HHistocompatibility Antigens Class IVaccinationCancerhemic and immune systemsImmunotherapymedicine.diseaseImmunologySarcoma ExperimentalT-Lymphocytes CytotoxicJournal of Immunotherapy
researchProduct

Targeting cancer with peptide aptamers

2011

Renaud Seigneuric 1,2 , Jessica Gobbo 1,2 , Pierre Colas 3 , Carmen Garrido 1,2 1 Heat Shock Proteins and Cancer, INSERM, UMR 866 IFR 100, Faculty of Medicine, 7 Boulevard Jeanne D'Arc, 21000 Dijon, France 2 Universite de Bourgogne, Dijon, France 3 CNRS USR 3151, P2I2 Group, Station Biologique, Roscoff, Bretagne, France Received: June 22, 2011; Accepted: June 24, 2011; Published: June 24, 2011; Correspondence: Renaud Seigneuric, email: // // Abstract A major endeavour in cancer chemotherapy is to develop agents that specifically target a biomolecule of interest. There are two main classes of targeting agents: small molecules and biologics. Among biologics (e.g.: antibodies), DNA, RNA but al…

Cancer chemotherapyAptamermedicine.medical_treatmentRecombinant Fusion ProteinsPeptide Aptamersheat shock proteinAntineoplastic AgentsComputational biologyPharmacologyBiologyTargeted therapy03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNeoplasmsmedicineHumansNanotechnologyMolecular Targeted TherapyHeat-Shock Proteins030304 developmental biologyCancer0303 health sciencesClinical Trials as TopicCanceraptamerAntineoplastic Protocolsmedicine.diseasetargeted therapypeptide3. Good healthOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisResearch PerspectivesAptamers PeptideOncotarget
researchProduct

Molecular Approaches to Target Heat Shock Proteins for Cancer Treatment

2015

HSP90 was the first molecular target to inhibit the interaction of this heat shock protein (HSP) with client proteins in cancer cells and tissues. The HSP90 inhibition was attempted to liberate from this chaperone the oncogenic fusion proteins, mutated and activated serine/threonine protein kinases, tyrosine kinases, as well as transcription factors with oncogenic activity, in this manner, the free proteins could be recognized by the proteasome system to be degraded. We should remember here that many HSP family members are overexpressed in different kinds of cancer tissues, these molecules act as chaperones of tumorigenesis. In cancer patients, the first generation of HSP90 inhibitors showe…

Cancer Drug resistance Heat shock proteins HSP27 HSP60 HSP70 HSP90 Molecular targets New anticancer drugs Therapy.
researchProduct

Kinetics and Intensity of the Expression of Genes Involved in the Stress Response Tightly Induced by Phenolic Acids in <i>Lactobacillus plantar…

2007

In <i>Lactobacillus plantarum</i>, PadR, the negative transcriptional regulator of <i>padA </i>encoding the phenolic acid decarboxylase, is divergently oriented from <i>padA. </i>Moreover, it forms an operonic structure with <i>usp1,</i> a genewhose products display homology with proteins belonging to the UspA family of universal stress proteins. PadR is inactivated by the addition of <i>p-</i>coumaric, ferulic or caffeic acid to the culture medium. In order to better characterize the stress response of this bacterium to phenolic acids, we report here the kinetics and quantitative expression by qRT-PCR of the 3 genes from the <i…

Carboxy-lyasesPhysiologymedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryMicrobiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundHeat shock proteinGene expressionmedicineCaffeic acidEscherichia coliGene030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyCell BiologyPhenolic acidbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologychemistryBiochemistryLactobacillus plantarumBiotechnologyMicrobial Physiology
researchProduct

Cardioprotection by gene therapy

2015

Ischemic heart disease remains the leading cause of death worldwide. Ischemic pre-, post-, and remote conditionings trigger endogenous cardioprotection that renders the heart resistant to ischemic-reperfusion injury (IRI). Mimicking endogenous cardioprotection by modulating genes involved in cardioprotective signal transduction provides an opportunity to reproduce endogenous cardioprotection with better possibilities of translation into the clinical setting. Genes and signaling pathways by which conditioning maneuvers exert their effects on the heart are partially understood. This is due to the targeted approach that allowed identifying one or a few genes associated with IRI and cardioprote…

Cardioprotectionmedicine.medical_specialtybiologybusiness.industryGene targetingSphingosine kinase 1Heat shock proteinInternal medicineGene expressionmedicinebiology.proteinCardiologyHepatocyte growth factorSignal transductionCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessTranscription factormedicine.drugInternational Journal of Cardiology
researchProduct

Geldanamycin-induced osteosarcoma cell death is associated with hyperacetylation and loss of mitochondrial pool of heat shock protein 60 (hsp60)

2013

Osteosarcoma is one of the most malignant tumors of childhood and adolescence that is often resistant to standard chemo- and radio-therapy. Geldanamycin and geldanamycin analogs have been recently studied as potential anticancer agents for osteosarcoma treatment. Here, for the first time, we have presented novel anticancer mechanisms of geldanamycin biological activity. Moreover, we demonstrated an association between the effects of geldanamycin on the major heat shock proteins (HSPs) and the overall survival of highly metastatic human osteosarcoma 143B cells. We demonstrated that the treatment of 143B cells with geldanamycin caused a subsequent upregulation of cytoplasmic Hsp90 and Hsp70 w…

Cell SurvivalLactams Macrocycliclcsh:MedicineApoptosisBone NeoplasmsBiologyMitochondrionMitochondrial Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundGeldanamycin Hsp60 Osteosarcoma cellHeat shock proteinCell Line Tumorpolycyclic compoundsBenzoquinonesHumansHeat shocklcsh:ScienceCell ProliferationOsteosarcomaMultidisciplinaryAntibiotics Antineoplasticlcsh:RAcetylationChaperonin 60GeldanamycinHsp90Molecular biologyMitochondriaProtein TransportchemistryCancer cellCancer researchbiology.proteinApoptotic signaling pathwayHSP60lcsh:QDrug Screening Assays AntitumorProtein Processing Post-TranslationalResearch ArticleSignal Transduction
researchProduct

Exosomal Heat Shock Proteins as New Players in Tumour Cell-to-cell Communication

2014

Exosomes have recently been proposed as novel elements in the study of intercellular communication in normal and pathological conditions. The biomolecular composition of exosomes reflects the specialized functions of the original cells. Heat shock proteins (Hsps) are a group of chaperone proteins with diverse biological roles. In recent years, many studies have focused on the extracellular roles played by Hsps that appear to be involved in cancer development and immune system stimulation. Hsps localized on the surface of exosomes, secreted by normal and tumour cells, could be key players in intercellular cross-talk, particularly during the course of different diseases, such as cancer. Exoso…

Cell signalingBiochemistry (medical)Clinical BiochemistryCancerCell CommunicationBiologylcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseaseExososomes HspsHeat Shock Proteinslcsh:RC254-282MicrovesiclesCell biologyExtracellular VesiclesImmune systemHeat shock proteinDrug deliveryExtracellularmedicineIntracellularextracellular vesicles; heat shock proteins; cell communicationJournal of Circulating Biomarkers
researchProduct

Heat shock protein 10 and signal transduction: a “capsula eburnea” of carcinogenesis?

2006

To date, little is known either about the physical interactions of heat shock protein 10 (Hsp10) with other proteins within the cell or its involvement in signal transduction pathways. Hsp10 has been considered mainly as a partner of Hsp60 in the Hsp60/10 protein folding machine. Only recently, Hsp10 was reported to interact with proteins involved in deoxyribonucleic acid checkpoint inactivation, termination of M-phase, messenger ribonucleic acid export, import of nuclear proteins, nucleocytoplasmic transport, and pheromone signaling pathways. At the same time, Hsp10 expression can be up-regulated in cancer cells, because it accumulates as the cell transformation progresses. Recent data sug…

Cell signalingColonCellular differentiationApoptosisChaperonin 60Cell BiologyBiologyCell cycleBiochemistryCell biologyFungal ProteinsBiochemistryHsp10 carcinogenesisNucleocytoplasmic TransportNeoplasmsHeat shock proteinColonic NeoplasmsChaperonin 10HumansHSP60MinireviewNuclear proteinSignal transductionSignal Transduction
researchProduct