Abstract

Heat shock factor (HSF), a transcriptional regulator with heat-activatable DNA binding ability, mediates the stress-induced expression of eukaryotic heat shock protein genes. Previous results from this laboratory demonstrated that a preparation of mixed male germ cell types from mouse testis exhibited a lower temperature threshold for activation of HSF1 DNA binding relative to other mouse cell types (Sarge, K.D., Bray, A.E., and Goodson, M.L. (1995) Nature 374, 126). The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the phenomenon of reduced HSF1 activation temperature is common to all testis cell types, both somatic and germ cell types, or whether it is a special property of male germ cells. The results show that a purified population of pachytene spermatocytes, one of the male germ cell types, exhibits a profile of reduced HSF1 activation temperature identical to that observed for the mixed germ cell preparation, with a threshold HSF1 activation temperature of 35 degrees C. Activation of HSF1 DNA binding in male germ cells by incubation at 38 degrees C is accompanied by the classic cellular stress response parameters of heat-induced HSF1 phosphorylation and increased expression of the hsp72 stress protein. In contrast, a preparation of somatic testis cell types exhibits HSF1 activation only at temperatures of 42 degrees C and above, a profile identical to that observed for mouse liver cells and mammalian cell lines. These results demonstrate that the phenomenon of reduced HSF1 activation temperature is a unique property of male germ cell types within the mammalian testis and demonstrate that HSF1 activated at this lower temperature threshold is fully capable of mediating a productive cellular stress response in these cell types.

Highlights

  • Heat shock factor (HSF), a transcriptional regulator with heat-activatable DNA binding ability, mediates the stress-induced expression of eukaryotic heat shock protein genes

  • The results show that a purified population ofpachytene spermatocytes, one of the male germ cell types, exhibits a profile of reduced HSFI activation temperature identical to that observed for the mixed germ cell preparation, with a threshold HSFI activation temperature of 35 CC

  • These results demonstrate that the phenomenon ofreduced HSFI activation temperature is a unique property of male germ cell types within the mammalian testis and demonstrate that HSFI activated at this lower temperature threshold is fully capable of mediating a productive cellular stress response in these cell types

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Heat shock factor (HSF), a transcriptional regulator with heat-activatable DNA binding ability, mediates the stress-induced expression of eukaryotic heat shock protein genes Previous results from this laboratory demonstrated that a preparation of mixed male germ cell types from mouse testis exhibited a lower temperature threshold for activation of HSFI DNA binding relative to other mouse cell types A preparation of somatic testis cell types exhibits HSFI activation only at temperatures of 42 cC and above, a profile identical to that observed for mouse liver cells and mammalian cell lines These results demonstrate that the phenomenon ofreduced HSFI activation temperature is a unique property of male germ cell types within the mammalian testis and demonstrate that HSFI activated at this lower temperature threshold is fully capable of mediating a productive cellular stress response in these cell types. A second, alternative possibility is that reduced HSFI activation temperature may have evolved as a unique property of male germ cells, somehow required for the normal function or development of these specialized cell types

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.