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1 July 2000 Expression of antisense hsp70 is a major determining factor in heat-induced cell death of P-19 carcinoma cells
Robert N. Nishimura, Donaldson Santos, Linda Esmaili, Su-Ting Fu, Barney E. Dwyer
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Abstract

Overexpressed heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is known to be associated with thermoprotection in a number of cell lines and transgenic animals. We hypothesized that because overexpression of Hsp70 protects cells from lethal heat stress, inhibition of expression should make cells susceptible to heat stress. The model used for this study was a stably transfected P-19 carcinoma cell line expressing antisense hsp70 under the control of the hsp70b promoter. The results showed marked inhibition of Hsp70 expression after heat shock correlated with heat-induced cell death. Hsp90 and Hsc70 protein expression were not affected by the antisense construct. Unexpectedly, heme oxygenase (HO-1), another highly inducible heat shock protein, was not induced after heat shock in the antisense hsp70 cell line. Heat shock transcription factor-1 (HSF-1) was in a highly phosphorylated state in the antisense cell line before and after heat shock. This was in contrast to the untransfected control P-19 cells where HSF-1 was primarily highly phosphorylated after heat shock. A control cell line expressing only the vector, pMAMneo, without the antisense construct also showed partial loss of Hsp70 induction but not increased cell death after heat shock. The findings support the role of Hsp70 in thermoresistance.

Robert N. Nishimura, Donaldson Santos, Linda Esmaili, Su-Ting Fu, and Barney E. Dwyer "Expression of antisense hsp70 is a major determining factor in heat-induced cell death of P-19 carcinoma cells," Cell Stress & Chaperones 5(3), 173-180, (1 July 2000). https://doi.org/10.1379/1466-1268(2000)005<0173:EOAHIA>2.0.CO;2
Received: 20 June 1999; Accepted: 1 January 2000; Published: 1 July 2000
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