The hyperfluidization of mammalian cell membranes acts as a signal to initiate the heat shock protein response

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Abstract

The concentrations of two structurally distinct membrane fluidizers, the local anesthetic benzyl alcohol (BA) and heptanol (HE), were used at concentrations so that their addition to K562 cells caused identical increases in the level of plasma membrane fluidity as tested by 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5- hexatriene (DPH) anisotropy. The level of membrane fluidization induced by the chemical agents on isolated membranes at such concentrations corresponded to the membrane fluidity increase seen during a thermal shift up to 42 °C. The formation of isofluid membrane states in response to the administration of BA or HE resulted in almost identical downshifts in the temperature thresholds of the heat shock response, accompanied by increases in the expression of genes for stress proteins such as heat shock protein (HSP)-70 at the physiological temperature. Similarly to thermal stress, the exposure of the cells to these membrane fluidizers elicited nearly identical increases of cytosolic Ca 2+ concentration in both Ca2+-containing and Ca 2+-free media and also closely similar extents of increase in mitochondrial hyperpolarization. We obtained no evidence that the activation of heat shock protein expression by membrane fluidizers is induced by a protein-unfolding signal. We suggest, that the increase of fluidity in specific membrane domains, together with subsequent alterations in key cellular events are converted into signal(s) leading to activation of heat shock genes. © 2005 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2005 FEBS.

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Balogh, G., Horváth, I., Nagy, E., Hoyk, Z., Benkõ, S., Bensaude, O., & Vígh, L. (2005). The hyperfluidization of mammalian cell membranes acts as a signal to initiate the heat shock protein response. FEBS Journal, 272(23), 6077–6086. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.04999.x

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