Abstract

Heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) protects cells under stress. Here, we demonstrate that HSP27 also promotes cell cycle progression of MRC-5 human lung fibroblast cells. Serum starvation for 24 h induced G1 arrest in these cells, and upon serum refeeding, the cells initiated cell cycle progression accompanied by an increase in HSP27 protein levels. HSP27 levels peaked at 12 h, and transcriptional up-regulation of six G2/M-related genes (CCNA2, CCNB1, CCNB2, CDC25C, CDCA3, and CDK1) peaked at 24-48 h. siRNA-mediated HSP27 silencing in proliferating MRC-5 cells induced G2 arrest coinciding with down-regulation of these six genes. Of note, the promoters of all of these genes have the cell cycle-dependent element and/or the cell cycle gene-homology region. These promoter regions are known to be bound by the E2F family proteins (E2F-1 to E2F-8) and retinoblastoma (RB) family proteins (RB1, p107, and p130), among which E2F-4 and p130 were strongly up-regulated in HSP27-knockdown cells. E2F-4 or p130 knockdown concomitant with the HSP27 knockdown rescued MRC-5 cells from G2 arrest and up-regulated the six cell cycle genes. Moreover, we observed cellular senescence in MRC-5 cells on day 3 after the HSP27 knockdown, as evidenced by increased senescence-associated β-gal activity and up-regulated inflammatory cytokines. The cellular senescence was also suppressed by the concomitant knockdown of E2F-4/HSP27 or p130/HSP27. Our findings indicate that HSP27 promotes cell cycle progression of MRC-5 cells by suppressing expression of the transcriptional repressors E2F-4 and p130.

Highlights

  • Heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) protects cells under stress

  • To test whether HSP27 was involved in cell cycle progression, we used the technique of serum starvation and refeeding to synchronize the cell cycle of MRC-5

  • The six genes associated with G2/M cell cycle progression (CCNA2, CCNB1, CCNB2, CDC25C, CDCA3, and CDK1) were strongly up-regulated in serum-refed MRC-5 (Fig. 1)

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

X Ah-Mee Park‡1, X Ikuo Tsunoda‡, and Osamu Yoshie‡§ From the ‡Department of Microbiology, Kindai University Faculty of Medicine, Osakasayama, Osaka 589-8511, Japan and the §Health and Kampo Institute, 1-11-10 Murasakiyama, Sendai, Miyagi 981-3205, Japan

Edited by Ursula Jakob
Results
Discussion
Cell culture and treatment
Immunoblot analysis
Cell proliferation assay
Cell counting and cell cycle analysis by MUSE
Quantitative PCR
Statistical analysis
Full Text
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