Search results for "shock"

showing 10 items of 1248 documents

Identification of ERp29, an endoplasmic reticulum lumenal protein, as a new member of the thyroglobulin folding complex.

2002

Folding and post-translational modification of the thyroid hormone precursor, thyroglobulin (Tg), in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of the thyroid epithelial cells is facilitated by several molecular chaperones and folding enzymes, such as BiP, GRP94, calnexin, protein disulfide isomerase, ERp72, and others. They have been shown to associate simultaneously and/or sequentially with Tg in the course of its maturation, thus forming large heterocomplexes in the ER of thyrocytes. Here we present evidence that such complexes include a novel member, an ER-resident lumenal protein, ERp29, which is present in all mammalian tissues with exceptionally high levels of expression in the secretory cells. …

Protein DenaturationProtein FoldingImmunoprecipitationmedicine.medical_treatmentBlotting WesternThyroid GlandThyrotropinBiologyEndoplasmic ReticulumLigandsBiochemistryThyroglobulinRats Sprague-DawleyCalnexinmedicineCentrifugation Density GradientAnimalsUreaSecretionProtein disulfide-isomeraseMolecular BiologyCells CulturedHeat-Shock ProteinsThyroid Epithelial CellsChromatographyEndoplasmic reticulumCell BiologyPrecipitin TestsRatsCross-Linking ReagentsBiochemistryLiverMicroscopy FluorescenceMicrosomes LiverProtein foldingThyroglobulinProtein BindingThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Curcumin Affects HSP60 Folding Activity and Levels in Neuroblastoma Cells.

2020

The fundamental challenge in fighting cancer is the development of protective agents able to interfere with the classical pathways of malignant transformation, such as extracellular matrix remodeling, epithelial−mesenchymal transition and, alteration of protein homeostasis. In the tumors of the brain, proteotoxic stress represents one of the main triggering agents for cell transformation. Curcumin is a natural compound with anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer properties with promising potential for the development of therapeutic drugs for the treatment of cancer as well as neurodegenerative diseases. Among the mediators of cancer development, HSP60 is a key factor for the maintenance of…

Protein FoldingCurcuminCell SurvivalCellCatalysisMalignant transformationCell Linelcsh:ChemistryInorganic ChemistryMitochondrial Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundNeuroblastomaDownregulation and upregulationHeat shock proteinmedicinepost-translational modificationsHumansSecretionPhysical and Theoretical Chemistrylcsh:QH301-705.5Molecular BiologySpectroscopyCell ProliferationHeat shock proteinDose-Response Relationship DrugCommunicationOrganic Chemistrymolecular chaperonesUbiquitinationGeneral MedicineChaperonin 60Computer Science ApplicationsCell biologyUp-RegulationBrain tumorGene Expression Regulation Neoplasticmedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999chemistryApoptosisheat shock proteinsMolecular chaperoneCurcuminbrain tumorsHSP60Post-translational modificationHSP60extracellular HSP60International journal of molecular sciences
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Biotechnical applications of small heat shock proteins from bacteria.

2012

The stress responses of most bacteria are thought to involve the upregulation of small heat shock proteins. We describe here some of the most pertinent aspects of small heat shock proteins, to highlight their potential for use in various applications. Bacterial species have between one and 13 genes encoding small heat shock proteins, the precise number depending on the species considered. Major efforts have recently been made to characterize the protein protection and membrane stabilization mechanisms involving small heat shock proteins in bacteria. These proteins seem to be involved in the acquisition of cellular heat tolerance. They could therefore potentially be used to maintain cell via…

Protein FoldingHeterologousmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMicrobiologyDownregulation and upregulationBacterial ProteinsStress PhysiologicalHeat shock proteinmedicineHumansViability assayEscherichia coliInclusion BodiesbiologyProtein StabilityProbioticsCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyHeat-Shock Proteins SmallSolubilityShock (circulatory)Food TechnologyProtein foldingmedicine.symptomBacteriaBiotechnologyThe international journal of biochemistrycell biology
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RNA-binding ability of PIPP in requires the entire protein

2003

Post-transcriptional fate of eukaryotic mRNAs depends on association with different classes of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). Among these proteins, the cold-shock domain (CSD)-containing proteins, also called Y-box proteins, play a key role in controlling the recruitment of mRNA to the translational machinery, in response to environmental cues, both in development and in differentiated cells. We recently cloned a rat cDNA encoding a new CSD-protein that we called PIPPin. This protein also contains two putative double-stranded RNA-binding motifs (PIP(1) and PIP(2)) flanking the central CSD, and is able to bind mRNAs encoding H1 degrees and H3.3 histone variants. In order to clarify the role of…

Protein FoldingNerve Tissue ProteinsSequence alignmentRNA-binding proteinPlasma protein bindingArticleRNA-binding proteinscold-shock domainPIPPinhistone variantsHistonesSettore BIO/10 - BiochimicaComplementary DNAHistone H2AAnimalsRNA MessengerGeneticsMessenger RNAbiologyRNA-Binding ProteinsRNACell BiologyRecombinant ProteinsProtein Structure TertiaryRatsCell biologyHistoneGene Expression Regulationbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineSequence AlignmentProtein BindingJournal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
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BAG3 mediates chaperone-based aggresome-targeting and selective autophagy of misfolded proteins.

2010

Increasing evidence indicates the existence of selective autophagy pathways, but the manner in which substrates are recognized and targeted to the autophagy system is poorly understood. One strategy is transport of a particular substrate to the aggresome, a perinuclear compartment with high autophagic activity. In this paper, we identify a new cellular pathway that uses the specificity of heat-shock protein 70 (Hsp70) to misfolded proteins as the basis for aggresome-targeting and autophagic degradation. This pathway is regulated by the stress-induced co-chaperone Bcl-2-associated athanogene 3 (BAG3), which interacts with the microtubule-motor dynein and selectively directs Hsp70 substrates …

Protein FoldingRecombinant Fusion ProteinsDyneinGreen Fluorescent ProteinsAggrephagyMice TransgenicBAG3BiochemistryMiceJUNQ and IPODChlorocebus aethiopsGeneticsAutophagyAnimalsHumansPoint MutationHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsMolecular BiologyAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingSequence DeletionInclusion BodiesMotor NeuronsbiologySuperoxide DismutaseAutophagyScientific ReportsDyneinsTransport proteinCell biologyProtein TransportAggresomeHEK293 CellsSpinal CordChaperone (protein)COS Cellsbiology.proteinApoptosis Regulatory ProteinsProteasome InhibitorsEMBO reports
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Complementation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutationsin genes involved in translation and protein folding (EFB1 and SSB1)with Candida albicans cloned…

2000

We have demonstrated that the expression of Candida albicans genes involved in translation and protein folding (EFB1 and SSB1) complements the phenotype of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants. The elongation factor 1beta (EF-1beta) is essential for growth and efb1 S. cerevisiae null mutant cells are not viable; however, viable haploid cells, carrying the disrupted chromosomal allele of the S. cerevisiae EFB1 gene and pEFB1, were isolated upon sporulation of a diploid strain which was heterozygous at the EFB1 locus and transformed with pEFB1 (a pEMBLYe23 derivative plasmid containing an 8-kb DNA fragment from the C. albicans genome which contains the EFB1 gene). This indicates that the C. albic…

Protein FoldingSaccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsSaccharomyces cerevisiaeMutantSaccharomyces cerevisiaeMicrobiologyPeptide Elongation Factor 1Transformation GeneticGene Expression Regulation FungalHeat shock proteinCandida albicansProtein biosynthesisHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsCandida albicansMolecular BiologyGenebiologyGenetic Complementation TestTemperatureGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyComplementationProtein BiosynthesisChaperone (protein)Mutationbiology.proteinResearch in Microbiology
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Targeting heat shock proteins in cancer

2010

Heat shock proteins (HSPs) HSP27, HSP70 and HSP90 are powerful chaperones. Their expression is induced in response to a wide variety of physiological and environmental insults including anti-cancer chemotherapy, thus allowing the cell to survive to lethal conditions. Different functions of HSPs have been described to account for their cytoprotective function, including their role as molecular chaperones as they play a central role in the correct folding of misfolded proteins, but also their anti-apoptotic properties. HSPs are often overexpressed in cancer cells and this constitutive expression is necessary for cancer cells' survival. HSPs may have oncogene-like functions and likewise mediat…

Protein Foldingendocrine systemCancer ResearchCell SurvivalProtein ConformationCellAntineoplastic AgentsApoptosisBreast NeoplasmsHsp27NeoplasmsHeat shock proteinmedicineAnimalsHumansHSP70 Heat-Shock ProteinsHSP90 Heat-Shock ProteinsHeat-Shock ProteinsCell ProliferationbiologyCell growthCancermedicine.diseaseHsp90Hsp70Cell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyDrug Resistance NeoplasmCancer cellbiology.proteinMolecular ChaperonesCancer Letters
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Proteins participating to the post-transcriptional regulation of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV via elements located in the 3′UTR

2009

Abstract In developing rat brain cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV (COXIV) expression is also regulated at post-transcriptional level and two 3′UTR-COXIV RNA-binding factors have been identified. Here, we report the enrichment and identification of the factors from just born rat brains by affinity chromatography of biotinylated 3′UTR-COXIV RNA–protein complexes on streptavidin-conjugated paramagnetic particles. We successfully isolated two main proteins of about 86 and 42 kDa, whose sequences were highly attributable to Hsp90 and Actin. The purified proteins maintain RNA-binding ability and specificity for COXIV messenger and, interacting with the 3′UTR, then could negatively modulate mRNA tr…

Protein subunitRNA-binding proteinMitochondrionChromatography AffinityElectron Transport Complex IVMitochondrial ProteinsRats Sprague-DawleySequence Analysis ProteinSerineAnimalsCytochrome c oxidaseHSP90 Heat-Shock ProteinsPhosphorylationPost-transcriptional regulation RNA-binding proteins Mitochondria Cytochrome c oxidase COXIV 3'UTR3' Untranslated RegionsMolecular BiologyPost-transcriptional regulationMessenger RNAbiologyThree prime untranslated regionBrainRNA-Binding ProteinsTranslation (biology)Cell BiologyActinsRatsMolecular WeightAnimals NewbornGene Expression RegulationBiochemistrybiology.proteinMolecular MedicineProtein BindingMitochondrion
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Heat shock protein 27 is involved in SUMO-2/3 modification of heat shock factor 1 and thereby modulates the transcription factor activity

2009

Heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) accumulates in stressed cells and helps them to survive adverse conditions. We have already shown that HSP27 has a function in the ubiquitination process that is modulated by its oligomerization/phosphorylation status. Here, we show that HSP27 is also involved in protein sumoylation, a ubiquitination-related process. HSP27 increases the number of cell proteins modified by small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO)-2/3 but this effect shows some selectivity as it neither affects all proteins nor concerns SUMO-1. Moreover, no such alteration in SUMO-2/3 conjugation is achievable by another HSP, such as HSP70. Heat shock factor 1 (HSF1), a transcription factor responsib…

Protein sumoylationTranscriptional ActivationCancer Researchendocrine systemanimal structuresSUMO proteinHSP27 Heat-Shock ProteinsBiologyurologic and male genital diseasesenvironment and public healthSubstrate Specificity03 medical and health sciencesTransactivation0302 clinical medicineHeat Shock Transcription FactorsHeat shock proteinGeneticsAnimalsHumansAnimals Cell Nucleus/metabolism DNA-Binding Proteins/*metabolism HSP27 Heat-Shock Proteins/chemistry/*metabolism Hela Cells Humans Protein Multimerization Protein Structure[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyHSF1Protein Structure QuaternaryMolecular BiologyTranscription factorUbiquitinsHeat-Shock Proteins030304 developmental biologyCell Nucleus0303 health sciencesMolecular biologyHsp70Cell biologyHeat shock factorDNA-Binding ProteinsProtein TransportQuaternary Protein Transport Small Ubiquitin-Related Modifier Proteins/*metabolism Substrate Specificity Transcription Factors/*metabolism Transcriptional Activation Ubiquitins/*metabolism030220 oncology & carcinogenesisembryonic structuresSmall Ubiquitin-Related Modifier ProteinsProtein MultimerizationHeLa CellsMolecular ChaperonesTranscription Factors
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Effect of transfection with PLP2 antisense oligonucleotides on gene expression of cadmium-treated MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells

2012

Emerging evidence indicates that cadmium (Cd) is able to regulate gene expression, drastically affecting the pattern of transcriptional activity in human normal and pathological cells. We have already shown that exposure of MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells to 5 μM CdCl(2) for 96 h, apart from significantly affecting mitochondrial metabolism, induces modifications of the expression level of genes coding for members of stress response-, mitochondrial respiration-, MAP kinase-, NF-κB-, and apoptosis-related pathways. In the present study, we have expanded the knowledge on the biological effects of Cd-breast cancer cell interactions, indicating PLP2 (proteolipid protein-2) as a novel member of the…

ProteolipidsApoptosisBreast NeoplasmsTransfectionBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryCadmium ChlorideStress PhysiologicalCell Line TumorGene expressionHumansRNA MessengerSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E Citologiaskin and connective tissue diseasesGeneCaspaseHeat-Shock ProteinsMARVEL Domain-Containing Proteinsbiologycadmium PLP2 breast cancer differential display-PCR caspase gene expressionTransfectionSuicide geneOligonucleotides AntisenseMolecular biologyGene Expression Regulation NeoplasticApoptosisMitogen-activated protein kinaseCaspasesCancer cellbiology.proteinNucleic Acid ConformationFemale
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