Abstract

The major heat shock protein, hsp70, is an ATP-binding protein which is synthesized in very large amounts in response to stress. In unstressed, or recovered, mammalian cells it is found in both nucleus and cytoplasm. Under these conditions, its interaction with nuclei is weak, and it is readily released from them upon lysis of cells in isotonic buffer. After heat shock, hsp70 binds tightly first to some nuclear component(s) and then to nucleoli. It can be released from these binding sites rapidly and specifically in vitro by as little as 1 microM ATP, but not by non-hydrolysable ATP analogues. Studies of hsp70 deletion mutations show that the ability of mutants to be released by ATP correlates with their ability to migrate to heat-shocked nucleoli and aid their repair in vivo. We propose a model in which ATP-driven cycles of binding and release of hsp70 help to solubilize aggregates of proteins or RNPs that form after heat shock. Cells also contain proteins related to hsp70 that are synthesized in the absence of stress. The most abundant of these shows the same behaviour as hsp70 after heat shock, and thus may perform a related function in both normal and stressed cells.

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