Hydrogen peroxide activates immediate binding of a Drosophila factor to DNA heat‐shock regulatory element in vivo and in vitro
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 189 (3), 553-558
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1990.tb15522.x
Abstract
The synthesis of heat-shock proteins via activation of heat-shock genes occurs in response to heat and various physical or chemical stressing agents. Transcriptional activation of heat-shock genes requires a heat-shock regulatory element in their promoter, to which a heat-shock specific transcription factor binds. In Drosophila cells, the heat-shock factor already exists in unstressed cells in an inactive form and acquires the capacity to bind to the heat-shock element following stress. The mechanism of this activation is not known; neither is it known whether the different stressing agents induce the heat-shock response through a common mechanism. We previously proposed that many agents known to induce the heat-shock response (substances interfering with respiratory metabolism, agents reacting with sulphydryl groups, metals, recovery from anaerobiosis and ischemia) might act via accumulation of reactive oxygen species. i.e. superoxide ion or H2O2. We show here that H2O2, introduced either in Drosophila cell cultures or in cell extracts, was able to activate heat-shock-element binding. Activation was rapid and H2O2 concentration dependent, with a threshold of 1 .mu.M. These results were confirmed with mouse fibroblast cells. This very rapid activation, in vivo or in vitro, suggests a direct effect of H2O2 either on the heat-shock factor itself or on its activator.This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activation in vitro of sequence-specific DNA binding by a human regulatory factorNature, 1988
- The role of oxidative stress in the induction of Drosophila heat-shock proteinsExperimental Cell Research, 1987
- Purification and Properties of Drosophila Heat Shock Activator ProteinScience, 1987
- Heat shock factor is regulated differently in yeast and HeLa cellsNature, 1987
- Synthesis of Heat Shock Proteins in Rat Liver After Ischemia and HyperthermiaHepatology, 1985
- Heat shock proteins are induced by cadmium in Drosophila cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1984
- Two protein-binding sites in chromatin implicated in the activation of heat-shock genesNature, 1984
- The possible role of the superoxide ion in the induction of heat-shock and specific proteins in aerobic Drosophila cells during return to normoxia after a period of anaerobiosisCanadian Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, 1983
- Induction of Drosophila heat-shock puffs in isolated polytene nucleiDevelopmental Biology, 1981
- Induction of the Drosophila heat shock response in isolated polytene nucleiCell, 1978