Dual roles of HSP70 chaperone HSPA1 in quality control of nascent and newly synthesized proteins
Guiyou Tian, Cheng Hu, Yun Yun, Wensheng Yang, Wolfgang Dubiel, Yabin Cheng, Dieter A Wolf
Abstract
Exposure to heat stress triggers a well‐defined acute response marked by HSF1‐dependent transcriptional upregulation of heat shock proteins. Cells allowed to recover acquire thermotolerance, but this adaptation is poorly understood. By quantitative proteomics, we discovered selective upregulation of HSP70‐family chaperone HSPA1 and its co‐factors, HSPH1 and DNAJB1, in MCF7 breast cancer cells acquiring thermotolerance. HSPA1 was found to have dual function during heat stress response: (i) During acute stress, it promotes the recruitment of the 26S proteasome to translating ribosomes, thus poising cells for rapid protein degradation and resumption of protein synthesis upon recovery; (ii) during thermotolerance, HSPA1 together with HSPH1 maintains ubiquitylated nascent/newly synthesized proteins in a soluble state required for their efficient proteasomal clearance. Consistently, deletion of HSPH1 impedes thermotolerance and esophageal tumor growth in mice, thus providing a potential explanation for the poor prognosis of digestive tract cancers with high HSPH1 and nominating HSPH1 as a cancer drug target. We propose dual roles of HSPA1 either alone or in complex with HSPH1 and DNAJB1 in promoting quality control of nascent/newly synthesized proteins and cellular thermotolerance. How cells exposed to heat stress acquire thermotolerance is poorly understood. Here, quantitative proteomics identifies upregulation of HSP70‐family chaperone HSPA1, which fulfills dual function in quality control of nascent proteins at translating ribosomes. Quantitative proteomics in cells acquiring thermotolerance reveals upregulation of heat‐shock proteins that promote proteasomal clearance of nascent polypeptides and rapid resumption of protein synthesis.