PMID: 8948427Jun 15, 1995Paper

Heat shock of human synovial and dermal fibroblasts induces delayed up-regulation of collagenase-gene expression

The Biochemical Journal
E G HitrayaS A Jimenez

Abstract

We investigated the effect of heat shock on the expression of the collagenase gene in normal human synovial and dermal fibroblasts. Heat shock (42-44 degrees C for 1 h) caused a marked increase in heat-shock protein 70 (HSP-70) mRNA levels, followed by a delayed increase in collagenase mRNA levels, in both cell types. Pretreatment with cycloheximide had no effect on the heat-shock-induced increase in HSP-70 mRNA expression, but abrogated the induction of collagenase mRNA during the recovery. To study the mechanisms of collagenase-gene induction by heat shock, the transcriptional activity of a collagenase-promoter-driven chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene was examined in transient transfection experiments. Heat shock was followed by a > 2-fold increase in CAT activity driven by a 3.8 kb fragment of the collagenase promoter, or by a construct containing an AP-1 binding site. A mutation in the AP-1 binding site abolished the effect of heat shock. Electrophoretic-mobility-shift assays revealed a marked increase in DNA-binding activity specific for the AP-1 binding site in nuclear extracts prepared from synovial fibroblasts recovering from heat shock. These results indicate that heat shock causes a delayed increas...Continue Reading

Citations

May 28, 2008·Experimental Dermatology·Young Mee LeeJin Ho Chung
Mar 27, 2001·Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications·R K HansenS A Fuqua

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