1. Academic Validation
  2. HSF1-TPR interaction facilitates export of stress-induced HSP70 mRNA

HSF1-TPR interaction facilitates export of stress-induced HSP70 mRNA

  • J Biol Chem. 2007 Nov 23;282(47):33902-7. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M704054200.
Hollie S Skaggs 1 Hongyan Xing Donald C Wilkerson Lynea A Murphy Yiling Hong Christopher N Mayhew Kevin D Sarge
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, Chandler Medical Center, University of Kentucky, 741 S. Limestone Street, Lexington, KY 40536-0084, USA.
Abstract

Stress conditions inhibit mRNA export, but mRNAs encoding heat shock proteins continue to be efficiently exported from the nucleus during stress. How HSP mRNAs bypass this stress-associated export inhibition was not known. Here, we show that HSF1, the transcription factor that binds HSP promoters after stress to induce their transcription, interacts with the nuclear pore-associating TPR protein in a stress-responsive manner. TPR is brought into proximity of the HSP70 promoter after stress and preferentially associates with mRNAs transcribed from this promoter. Disruption of the HSF1-TPR interaction inhibits the export of mRNAs expressed from the HSP70 promoter, both endogenous HSP70 mRNA and a luciferase reporter mRNA. These results suggest that HSP mRNA export escapes stress inhibition via HSF1-mediated recruitment of the nuclear pore-associating protein TPR to HSP genes, thereby functionally connecting the first and last nuclear steps of the gene expression pathway, transcription and mRNA export.

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