TY - JOUR
T1 - The stress of protein misfolding
T2 - From single cells to multicellular organisms
AU - Gidalevitz, Tali
AU - Prahlad, Veena
AU - Morimoto, Richard I.
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - Organisms survive changes in the environment by altering their rates of metabolism growth and reproduction. At the same time the system must ensure the stability and functionality of its macromolecules. Fluctuations in the environment are sensed by highly conserved stress responses and homeostatic mechanisms and of these the heat shock response (HSR) represents an essential response to acute and chronic proteotoxic damage. However unlike the strategies employed to maintain the integrity of the genome protection of the proteome must be tailored to accommodate the normal flux of nonnative proteins and the differences in protein composition between cells and among individuals. Moreover adult cells are likely to have significant differences in the rates of synthesis and clearance that are influenced by intrinsic errors in protein expression genetic polymorphisms and fluctuations in physiological and environmental conditions. Here we will address how protein homeostasis (proteostasis) is achieved at the level of the cell and organism and how the threshold of the stress response is set to detect and combat protein misfolding. For metazoans the requirement for coordinated function and growth imposes additional constraints on the detection signaling and response to misfolding and requires that the HSR is integrated into various aspects of organismal physiology such as lifespan. This is achieved by hierarchical regulation of heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) by the metabolic state of the cell and centralized neuronal control that could allow optimal resource allocation between cells and tissues. We will examine how protein folding quality control mechanisms in individual cells may be integrated into a multicellular level of control and further even custom-designed to support individual variability and impose additional constraints on evolutionary adaptation.
AB - Organisms survive changes in the environment by altering their rates of metabolism growth and reproduction. At the same time the system must ensure the stability and functionality of its macromolecules. Fluctuations in the environment are sensed by highly conserved stress responses and homeostatic mechanisms and of these the heat shock response (HSR) represents an essential response to acute and chronic proteotoxic damage. However unlike the strategies employed to maintain the integrity of the genome protection of the proteome must be tailored to accommodate the normal flux of nonnative proteins and the differences in protein composition between cells and among individuals. Moreover adult cells are likely to have significant differences in the rates of synthesis and clearance that are influenced by intrinsic errors in protein expression genetic polymorphisms and fluctuations in physiological and environmental conditions. Here we will address how protein homeostasis (proteostasis) is achieved at the level of the cell and organism and how the threshold of the stress response is set to detect and combat protein misfolding. For metazoans the requirement for coordinated function and growth imposes additional constraints on the detection signaling and response to misfolding and requires that the HSR is integrated into various aspects of organismal physiology such as lifespan. This is achieved by hierarchical regulation of heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) by the metabolic state of the cell and centralized neuronal control that could allow optimal resource allocation between cells and tissues. We will examine how protein folding quality control mechanisms in individual cells may be integrated into a multicellular level of control and further even custom-designed to support individual variability and impose additional constraints on evolutionary adaptation.
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U2 - 10.1101/cshperspect.a009704
DO - 10.1101/cshperspect.a009704
M3 - Article
C2 - 21536706
AN - SCOPUS:84863533791
SN - 1943-0264
VL - 3
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
JF - Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
IS - 6
ER -