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Bacterial endotoxin modifies heat shock factor-1 activity in RAW 264.7 cells: implications for TNF-α regulation during exposure to febrile range temperatures
25
Citations
35
References
2004
Year
Microbial PathogensImmunologyImmune RegulationTransient ReversalHeat Shock FactorBacterial PathogensInflammationHost ResponseTranscriptional RegulationHyperthermiaInfection ControlSystems BiologyRange TemperaturesVirulence FactorImmune FunctionGene ExpressionCell BiologyRaw 264.7Clinical MicrobiologyTranscription RegulationCytokineSignal TransductionTransient InactivationPathogenesisMicrobiologyTnf-α RegulationMedicine
Recent studies have identified heat shock factor (HSF)-1, the predominant heat/stress-stimulated transcriptional activator of heat shock protein genes as a repressor of certain cytokine genes, including TNF-alpha and IL-1beta. We previously showed that exposing macrophages to febrile-range temperature (FRT; 39.5 degrees C) activates HSF-1 to a DNA binding form that does not activate heat shock protein gene transcription, but apparently represses TNF-alpha and IL-1beta transcription. Prewarming macrophages to 39.5 degrees C for 30 min prior to stimulation with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) does not change the induction of TNF-alpha transcription, but markedly reduces its duration. This raised the question of how TNF-alpha transcription could occur at all in the presence of activated HSF-1. We used RAW 264.7 cells to test the hypothesis that macrophage activation triggers a transient reversal of HSF-1-mediated repression, thereby allowing induction of TNF-alpha transcription. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays revealed that LPS triggers a transient inactivation of HSF-1 that temporally correlates with TNF-alpha transcription and was associated with a transient increase in HSF-1 molecular weight, a decrease in its pI, and appearance of HSF-1 phosphorylating activity. The serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin A, blocked the inhibitory affect of FRT on LPS-induced TNF-alpha generation and prevented the re-activation of HSF-1. We propose that LPS stimulation of FRT-exposed macrophages stimulates a sequential phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of HSF-1, causing a cycle of inactivation and reactivation of HSF-1 repressor activity that allows a temporally-limited period of gene transcription.
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