Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Molecular and Cellular Biology, April 2003, p. 2953-2968, Vol. 23, No. 8
0270-7306/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.23.8.2953-2968.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Andrey Mikhailov,1 Jorma J. Palvimo,4 Lila Pirkkala,1,
and Lea Sistonen1,3*
Turku Centre for Biotechnology, University of Turku and Åbo Akademi University,1 Department of Biochemistry and Food Chemistry, University of Turku,2 Department of Biology, Åbo Akademi University, Turku,3 Biomedicum Helsinki, Institute of Biomedicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland4
Received 15 July 2002/ Returned for modification 29 August 2002/ Accepted 27 January 2003
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The elevated synthesis of Hsps upon heat shock is caused by a multistep activation of HSF1 (for a review see reference 45). Under normal growth conditions, inactive HSF1 is distributed throughout the cell as a monomer that is constitutively phosphorylated on certain serine residues. Upon activation, HSF1 undergoes several modifications, such as trimerization and localization to specific nuclear structures, called nuclear stress granules (for a review see reference 25). Independently of the monomer-to-trimer transition, which is required for DNA binding, phosphorylation of HSF1 is strongly induced during heat shock. Although the level of HSF1 bulk phosphorylation correlates well with its transcriptional activity, the data on phosphorylation-mediated regulation of HSF1 have remained relatively scattered. So far, four phosphorylated serine residues (S230, S303, S307, and S363) have been identified. In reporter assays, the constitutive phosphorylation of S303, S307, and S363 has been shown to repress the transactivation capacity of HSF1 under normal growth conditions (5, 8, 31, 32). However, kinetic analysis of the phosphorylation status of these sites during the HSF1 activation-deactivation cycle is missing. In contrast to the repressive role of S303, S307, and S363, S230 was recently demonstrated to be inducibly phosphorylated upon heat shock and to positively contribute to the transcriptional activity of HSF1 (17). Since the majority of HSF1 phosphorylation sites are still unknown, the biological relevance of HSF1 phosphorylation in regulating various aspects of HSF1 functions remains to be established.
Posttranslational modification by sumoylation has been reported for a variety of proteins, including several transcriptional regulators, such as p53, c-Jun, c-Myb, AP-2, androgen receptor, promyelocytic leukemia protein (PML), and I
B
(3, 11, 46; for a review see reference 36). This modification involves covalent conjugation of a small ubiquitin-like modifier 1 (SUMO-1, also called GMP-1, PIC1, sentrin, Ubl1, Smt3c, and hSmt3) to one or several lysines of the substrate by an isopeptide bond (for a review see reference 36). SUMO-1 conjugation utilizes a unique E1-activating enzyme complex termed SAE1/SAE2 (Aos1/Uba2 [24]) and an E2-conjugating enzyme, Ubc9 (22), as well as a group of recently characterized E3 ligases, a family of protein-inhibitor-of-activated-STAT (PIAS) proteins (21, 23, 29, 33, 50, 55, 60), and nucleoporin RanBP2 (43). SUMO-1 modification has been indicated to have diverse substrate-specific functions. Sumoylation has been shown to act antagonistically to ubiquitination by enhancing protein stability, as exemplified by sumoylation of the NF-
B inhibitor I
B
(9). In addition to regulation of protein half-life, SUMO-1 modification may alter other properties of its targets and consequently their activities. In the case of p53, SUMO-1 modification has been reported to affect the transactivation capacity of p53 as well as its intracellular localization (12, 13, 39, 49, 55). SUMO-1 has also been shown previously to localize into PML nuclear bodies where it is covalently bound to the PML protein (10), which appears to be essential for the structural and functional integrity of PML nuclear bodies (20, 65). In addition to SUMO-1, the SUMO protein family has two other members, SUMO-2 and SUMO-3, which are highly homologous to each other and share about 50% sequence identity with SUMO-1 (for a review see reference 36). Although there is evidence that endogenous SUMO-2/3 would have, at least partially, distinct sets of substrates compared to those of SUMO-1 (51), the specificity of the individual SUMO family members remains to be elucidated.
Considering the many functions attributed to SUMO proteins, understanding the biological relevance of sumoylation requires further elucidation of the mechanisms that regulate SUMO conjugation. Phosphorylation has been proposed as an important regulatory mechanism of ubiquitination and acetylation (1, 2). Interestingly, phosphorylation of SUMO substrates, such as c-Jun, p53, I
B
, and PML, has been reported previously to inhibit their sumoylation (9, 39, 40). In this study, we examined whether inducible phosphorylation of human HSF1 is accompanied by other posttranslational modifications. Our results show that lysine 298, located in the regulatory domain of HSF1, functions as an in vivo sumoylation site, and importantly, this sumoylation occurs in conjunction with phosphorylation of nearby serine 303. Phosphorylation on S303 and sumoylation on K298 were markedly enhanced in response to stress stimuli, and HSF1 and SUMO-1 were transiently colocalized in the nuclear stress granules in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. This strict cooperativity provides, to our knowledge, the first evidence of phosphorylation as a positive regulator of sumoylation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cell culture and transient-transfection experiments. Human K562 erythroleukemia cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) and antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin) in a humidified 5% CO2 atmosphere at 37°C. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), derived from a hsf1-/- mouse (hsf1-/- MEFs [35]), were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% FCS, 10 mM minimal essential medium nonessential amino acids, 0.96 µl of ß-mercaptoethanol per 100 ml, and antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin). HeLa cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 5% FCS with supplements. A total amount of 20 or 30 µg of DNA was transfected into cells by electroporation, 250 V (975 µF) for K562 cells, 220 V (975 µF) for HeLa cells, and 280 V (975 µF) for hsf1-/- MEFs, with a Gene Pulser electroporator (Bio-Rad Laboratories). Cells were incubated at 37°C for 24 to 36 h prior to the experimental treatments. Heat shock was performed at 42°C for indicated time periods. The proteasome inhibitor MG132 (Peptide Institute, Inc.) was used at 20 µM for 5 h.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting assays. For in vivo immunoprecipitation experiments, the cell pellet from transiently transfected cells was resuspended in 200 µl of lysis buffer (25 mM HEPES, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 0.5% Triton X-100, 20 mM ß-glycerophosphate, 20 mM paranitrophenylphosphate, 100 µM sodium orthovanadate, 0.5 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 1x Complete mini-protease inhibitor cocktail [Roche Diagnostics]) supplemented with 20 mM N-ethylmaleimide and 5 µM MG132, followed by centrifugation for 25 min at 15,000 x g at 4°C. Subsequent to protein extraction, 500 µg of total cell proteins was preincubated with 40 µl of a 50% slurry of protein G-Sepharose (Amersham) in TEG buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol) containing 150 mM NaCl and 0.1% Triton X-100 for 30 min at 4°C followed by brief centrifugation. The precleared cellular lysate was incubated with anti-c-Myc (9E10; Sigma), anti-Flag M2 (Sigma), or monoclonal anti-human HSF1 (Neomarkers) antibodies at room temperature for 30 min under rotation, after which 40 µl of a 50% slurry of protein G-Sepharose was added to the reaction mixture and incubated under rotation for 1 h or overnight at 4°C. After centrifugation, the Sepharose beads were washed four times with supplemented TEG buffer, and immunoprecipitated proteins were run on a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-8% polyacrylamide gel, transferred to nitrocellulose membrane (Protran nitrocellulose; Schleicher & Schuell), and immunoblotted with anti-SUMO-1 (anti-GMP-1) antibody (Zymed Laboratories, Inc.), anti-HSF1 (18), or phosphopeptide-specific antibody anti-p-S303/7 (this study; see below). For the input control, membranes were blotted with anti-HSF1 antibodies, and for controlling the protein levels, the membranes were reblotted with anti-Hsc70 SPA-815 or anti-Hsp90 SPA-835 antibodies (StressGen). For analysis of Hsp70 levels anti-Hsp70 antibody SPA-810 (StressGen) was used. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies were purchased from Promega and Amersham, and the immunocomplexes were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL; Amersham).
Gel mobility shift assays and antibody perturbation. Whole-cell extracts (15 to 30 µg) were incubated with a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide representing the proximal HSE of the human hsp70 promoter (38). The protein-DNA complexes were analyzed on a native 4% polyacrylamide gel as described previously (38). For the perturbation assay, antibodies were incubated in indicated dilutions with the cell lysates at room temperature for 15 min before the gel mobility shift assay.
In vivo 32P labeling and phosphopeptide mapping. Plasmids encoding wild-type Myc-tagged HSF1 or mutants were transfected by electroporation 40 h prior to starting the labeling. For the labeling, cells were incubated in phosphate-free minimal essential medium supplemented with 10% dialyzed FCS and 0.3 mCi of [32P]orthophosphate/ml for 3 h before heat shock. After treatments cells were washed once with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and lysed with 500 µl of lysis buffer (50 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl, 1% NP-40, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 1 mM EDTA, 100 µM sodium orthovanadate, 2 mM sodium fluoride, 1x Complete mini-protease inhibitor cocktail [Roche Diagnostics]). The lysates were cleared by centrifugation (15,000 x g, 10 min, 4°C). HSF1 was immunoprecipitated from the supernatants for 2 h by using 10 µg of anti-Myc antibody (9E10; Sigma) together with protein G-Sepharose (Amersham). After the Sepharose beads were washed six times with the lysis buffer, the precipitates were boiled with 3x Laemmli sample buffer and resolved on an SDS-8% polyacrylamide gel. Tryptic digestion and two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping were performed as described previously (17). Briefly, the labeled HSF1 band was excised from the dried gel and digested with L-1-tosylamide-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK)-treated trypsin (Sigma). The tryptic digest was applied on a cellulose thin-layer chromatography plate (Merck) and separated in two dimensions by electrophoresis and thin-layer chromatography. The phosphopeptides were visualized by autoradiography.
Generation of the S303/7 phosphopeptide antibody and Western blotting. For preparation of the phosphoantibody, a peptide, KEEPPpSPPQpSPRVE, was synthesized, conjugated to hemocyanin, and injected into a rabbit. The antiserum was positively affinity purified by using the KEEPPpSPPQpSPRVE peptide immobilized on a HiTrap-N-hydroxysuccinimide column (Amersham). For immunoblot analysis nitrocellulose membranes were blocked in 5% milk-25 mM MOPS (morpholinepropanesulfonic acid)-125 mM NaCl (pH 7.3) for 2 h. After blocking membranes were rinsed with MOPS buffer supplemented with 0.3% Tween 20 (MOPS-TW) and incubated in 5% bovine serum albumin-MOPS-TW for 30 min. The primary antibody was added to the bovine serum albumin solution in a dilution of 1:1,000 and incubated overnight at 4°C with gentle shaking. The excess of primary antibody was rinsed with water for 10 min followed by three 10-min washes with MOPS-TW. The horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit antibody (Promega) was diluted 1:20,000 in 3% milk-MOPS-TW and incubated for 1 h, followed by three 10-min washes with MOPS-TW and detection by ECL (Amersham).
SUMO-1 conjugation in vitro. Recombinant glutathione S-transferase (GST)-SUMOGG-1, GST-Ubc9, GST-SAE1, and GST-SAE2 (SAE1 and SAE2 plasmids kindly provided by Ronald Hay, University of Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom) were produced and purified as described previously (33). In vitro translations of HSF1 mutants were performed with the TNT-coupled transcription-translation system (Promega) in the presence of [35S]methionine. The conjugation assay was performed as described previously (33). Briefly, the in vitro-translated product was incubated with GST-SUMOGG-1, GST-Ubc9, and the mixture of GST-SAE1 and GST-SAE2 in the reaction buffer (50 mM HEPES [pH 7.7], 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 2 mM ATP, 1 mM dithiothreitol) at 30°C for 1 h. The reaction was terminated by addition of 3x Laemmli sample buffer and boiling. Samples were resolved by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and visualized by fluorography.
Immunofluorescence microscopy. For immunolabeling, HeLa cells were grown on coverslips. After treatments the cells were immediately fixed and permeabilized by incubating them with ice-cold methanol for 6 min. After the fixation cells were washed three times for 5 min with PBS-0.05% Tween 20 (PBST), followed by blocking with 20% boiled normal goat serum (GS) in PBST for 1 h. Primary antibody incubations were made in 5% GS-PBST with dilutions of 1:500 for anti-Myc (Sigma), 1:500 for anti-HSF1 (Neomarkers), and 1:40 for anti-p-S303/7. The excess of primary antibodies was washed off for three washes of 5 min each with PBST. Secondary antibodies (goat anti-mouse Alexa 488 and Alexa 568 for anti-Myc or goat anti-rabbit Alexa 546 for anti-p-S303/7) were diluted 1:500 in 5% GS-PBST, and cells were incubated for 1 h followed by three washes and mounting with Vectashield supplemented with DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole; Vector Laboratories). Immunofluorescence was analyzed with a Leica DMR fluorescence microscope equipped with a digital Hamamatsu ORCA charge-coupled device camera.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
To examine whether the heat-induced increase in HSF1 sumoylation would persist after a return to normal temperature, heat-shocked cells were subjected to a recovery period of 3 h at normal temperature. As shown in Fig. 1C, the amount of HSF1 sumoylation returned to the control levels upon recovery, indicating that the heat-induced HSF1 sumoylation is a reversible event. Treatment of K562 cells with the proteasome inhibitor MG132 is known to induce the heat shock response, including phosphorylation and activation of HSF1 (18, 44). To study the effect of proteasome inhibition on HSF1 sumoylation, K562 cells coexpressing HSF1 and SUMO-1 were treated with MG132. As shown in Fig. 1C, MG132 treatment induced a similar SUMO-1 modification as did heat shock, indicating that SUMO modification of HSF1 is not unique to heat stress.
Lysine 298 is an in vivo SUMO modification site of HSF1.
In most proteins, SUMO modification occurs at a consensus sequence,
KxE, including the target lysine and certain surrounding amino acids (
represents a hydrophobic residue and "x" represents any amino acid). Additional sequences may be required for optimal modification, and in fact, the presence of a nuclear localization signal has been reported to be of importance, as SUMO modification predominantly occurs in the nucleus (48). We analyzed the amino acid sequence of HSF1 and found three SUMO consensus sequences, i.e., K91, K126, and K298, and three sites with partial consensus, i.e., K150, K162, and K381 (Fig. 2A). After mutation of the lysines to arginines, the HSF1 mutants were coexpressed together with SUMO-1 in K562 cells and analyzed by immunoprecipitation. All mutants but one, K298R, were capable of forming SUMO-1 conjugates (Fig. 2B), suggesting that K298 is a major site for SUMO conjugation in vivo. Identical results were obtained with SUMO-2 (data not shown). As illustrated in Fig. 2C, the sumoylation target sequence on human HSF1 is conserved among vertebrates including the frog Xenopus laevis and the zebra fish Danio rerio, whereas HSF of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster does not contain a target sequence in this region.
|
|
A mutants of serines 303 and 307 were transfected into K562 cells, in vivo 32P labeled, and analyzed by tryptic phosphopeptide mapping (Fig. 4). In the wild-type HSF1, the majority of phosphorylated molecules were phosphorylated on both S303 and S307 (white arrow), since the phosphopeptide corresponding to the single phosphorylated state was undetectable (black arrow). S303 was strongly phosphorylated in the S307A mutant, as demonstrated by the appearance of a spot corresponding to a single phosphorylated peptide (black arrow). Phosphorylation of S307 seems not to be needed to prime S303 phosphorylation, since the spot representing the single phosphorylated peptide (black arrow) in the S307A map was as strong as the respective spot in the S303A map. As expected, this spot disappeared when both S303 and S307 were mutated to alanine. Taken together, the inhibition of S303 phosphorylation in the S303A and S303/7A mutants (Fig. 4) corresponded to the lack of sumoylation in these mutants (Fig. 3B). Moreover, S303 was potently phosphorylated in the S307A mutant (Fig. 4), which also was a good substrate for SUMO-1 modification (Fig. 3B).
|
A mutants of S303 and S307 were analyzed by Western blotting. The phosphoantibody specifically recognized molecules that were phosphorylated on both S303 and S307, since only the wild-type HSF1 was efficiently detected with the phosphoantibody, whereas the anti-HSF1 antibody recognized the wild-type HSF1 and all the mutants equally well (Fig. 5B). Furthermore, the phosphoantibody recognized the K298R mutant transfected into hsf1-/- MEFs, indicating that the mutation of K298 did not inhibit phosphorylation of S303 and S307 (Fig. 5C). To elucidate whether HSF1 molecules phosphorylated on S303/7 could display binding activity to the HSE upon heat shock, an antibody perturbation assay was performed with K562 cells. As shown in Fig. 5D, with a 1:10 dilution of the phosphoantibody the HSF1-HSE complex was supershifted, indicating that HSF1 phosphorylated on S303/7 is capable of binding to HSE.
|
|
HSF1 S303/7D is preferentially sumoylated in vitro. To better understand the mechanisms involved in the phosphorylation-mediated regulation of HSF1 sumoylation, we examined whether mimicking of S303 phosphorylation would affect HSF1 sumoylation also in a cell-free system. In vitro sumoylation assays were performed by incubating in vitro-translated 35S-labeled HSF1 mutants together with ATP and purified GST fusions of SAE1/SAE2 (E1), Ubc9 (E2), and SUMO-1. As shown in Fig. 7, HSF1 was sumoylated in the presence of SAE1/SAE2, Ubc9, and SUMO-1, but not if Ubc9 was absent or if lysine 298 was mutated. The mobility shift caused by attachment of the GST-tagged SUMO-1 was comparable to that detected for androgen receptor in vitro (Fig. 7) (46) and to that caused by GFP-SUMO-1 in vivo (Fig. 1). Intriguingly, mimicking of S303/7 phosphorylation by S303/7D mutation increased sumoylation of HSF1 in vitro. These results indicate that phosphorylation of serine 303 mediates its sumoylation-promoting effect by changing HSF1 conformation and thereby exposing the sumoylation site, although we cannot exclude the possibility of a phosphospecific binding partner in the reticulocyte lysate.
|
|
|
To explore whether the inhibitory effect of S303A mutation on HSF1 sumoylation was reflected in the formation of HSF1 and SUMO-1 cogranules, a similar experiment as described above was performed with the nonphosphorylatable mutant. S303A HSF1 was localized to the nuclear stress granules upon heat shock similarly to the wild type (Fig. 9C; also 9A and B). This result emphasizes that phosphorylation of S303 does not regulate HSF1 localization and excludes the possibility that S303 phosphorylation would promote HSF1 sumoylation through subcellular localization. However, no colocalization between S303A HSF1 and SUMO-1 was detected after a 15-min heat shock (Fig. 9C), indicating that HSF1 targeting to the nuclear stress granules can occur independently of SUMO-1 conjugation, whereas covalent SUMO-1 conjugation is needed for the colocalization. This finding was further supported by the K298R mutant, which also localized to the stress granules, without displaying any colocalization with SUMO-1 (Fig. 9C). As expected, under normal growth conditions both S303A and K298R displayed diffuse nuclear localization similarly to the wild-type HSF1 (data not shown). In conclusion, our immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated that stress induces a prominent but transient colocalization of HSF1 and SUMO-1 to the same subnuclear compartment at the onset of the heat shock response. The localization of HSF1 to the stress granules occurs independently of the phosphorylation status of S303, but S303 phosphorylation is required for the transient HSF1-SUMO-1 colocalization.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In vivo studies of HSF1 phosphorylation during different stages of the heat shock response are greatly challenged by the existence of multiple phosphorylation sites, the majority of which are still unknown. Another limiting factor in studying the dynamic changes of a single phosphorylation site is the poor reproducibility of the elaborate in vivo 32P-labeling and phosphopeptide mapping experiments. To avoid these technical caveats, we generated a phosphoepitope-specific antibody recognizing the phosphorylated state of serines 303 and 307. Kinetic analysis of S303/7 phosphorylation revealed a rapid and prominent increase in phosphorylation upon heat shock and gradual dephosphorylation at the attenuation phase during a continuous exposure to heat shock. This result was surprising in the light of several earlier studies that have indicated serines 303 and 307 to be constitutively phosphorylated to keep the factor inactive under normal growth conditions (4, 31, 32). Furthermore, our experiments employing pharmacological activators and inhibitors of mitogen-activated protein kinase-extracellular signal-regulated kinase signaling, which have been indicated to target S303/7 (4, 31, 32), did not show major changes in the phosphorylation status of these sites (data not shown). Therefore, it is plausible that several kinases are able to phosphorylate serines 303 and 307 in vivo, perhaps in a cell-specific manner.
During the course of this study, another report describing a strictly heat-inducible HSF1 sumoylation on K298 was published (19). Although the basic findings are similar, major controversies exist. Hong and coworkers showed a sharp
80-kDa SUMO-1-reactive band that appeared in HSF1 immunoprecipitates derived from heat-shocked cells and was referred to as endogenously sumoylated HSF1. Surprisingly, this band comigrates with hyperphosphorylated HSF1. Instead, we found a new HSF1-reactive band with markedly decreased electrophoretic mobility, which even upon SUMO overexpression appeared in a substoichiometric ratio. Hong and coworkers postulated that the retarded mobility on SDS-PAGE, which is characteristic of activated HSF1, is caused by heat-induced sumoylation. In our study, no difference in electrophoretic mobility between the major bands of wild-type HSF1 and K298R upon heat shock could be detected, suggesting that the heat-induced retardation around 80 kDa is caused by hyperphosphorylation (7, 17, 31, 53, 63), rather than by sumoylation. It was shown in the earlier study (19) that sumoylation in vitro converted HSF1 into a DNA-binding form and that transcriptional competence, as measured by the luciferase reporter assay in HeLa cells, was completely abolished by K298R mutation. Our DNA-binding analysis of the K298R mutant, when transfected into hsf1-/- MEFs, does not support the conclusion of SUMO-1-regulated DNA binding in vivo, since, in response to heat shock, the sumoylation-deficient mutant was as capable of binding to HSE as was the wild type. Similarly, Hsp70 expression was equally induced when the wild-type HSF1 and the K298R mutant were expressed in MEFs lacking endogenous HSF1. According to the other study (19), HSF1 and SUMO-1 displayed complete colocalization in the nuclear bodies also during a prolonged exposure to heat shock. In our experiments, a prominent colocalization occurred only transiently, and HSF1 was still localized to the stress granules after dissociation of the SUMO-1-HSF1 complex. Moreover, the ability of S303A and K298R mutants to localize to the HSF1 stress granules, despite the lack of SUMO-1 conjugation and colocalization, is not in line with the hypothesis that sumoylation would regulate the localization of HSF1 to the stress granules. Notably, our immunofluorescence analyses were conducted in HeLa cells, since we were not able to detect HSF1 granules in hsf1-/- MEFs. In fact, the study by Hong and coworkers (19) is, to our knowledge, the only report where HSF1 granules have been detected in murine cells. In the light of our results, it is plausible that the sumoylated population of HSF1 performs stress-induced functions different from the regulation of heat shock gene expression. Alternatively, sumoylation might favor the HSF1 transactivation capacity, the changes being too subtle and dynamic to allow detection with the available techniques. In conclusion, it appears that HSF1 sumoylation is a more complex and dynamic process than originally anticipated, and statements about the role of SUMO conjugation in the multistep activation of HSF1 should therefore be treated with great caution.
The list of reports describing subnuclear compartmentalization of various proteins, including transcriptional regulators, splicing factors, and SUMO substrates, is growing fast. Although in many cases the functional significance is still missing, it is anticipated that the presence of certain regulatory proteins in the same restricted compartment in the nucleus is needed to enhance the interaction and cross talk between the various members of the same regulatory unit. SUMO-1 has been shown elsewhere to target many of its substrates into nuclear structures, known as PML bodies or PODs (for a review see reference 57). This does not seem to be the case for HSF1, since our analysis using the sumoylation-deficient HSF1 mutants provides evidence that, when conjugation is blocked, SUMO-1 and HSF1 localize to distinct structures. Because these HSF1 mutants localize into the nuclear stress granules similarly to the wild type, it is probable that SUMO-1 modification of HSF1 is not needed for the granule formation. This is in agreement with earlier studies by Cotto and coworkers (6) showing that HSF1 does not colocalize with the PML bodies. Nevertheless, the HSF1-SUMO-1 cogranules that we observed within a 5- to 15-min time window at the onset of heat shock response demonstrated the highly dynamic nature of the subnuclear structures. These results emphasize the great reorganization potential of nuclear bodies in response to specific stimuli, and therefore, the composition of nuclear structures that have been regarded as distinct entities may vary in a condition-dependent manner. Identification of novel members of the subnuclear compartments, although challenging, should provide more mechanistic insights into the biological role and the interplay of these nuclear structures.
Cooperative regulation of phosphorylation and sumoylation appears to be a common denominator for several SUMO targets. Desterro and coworkers (9) showed that SUMO-1 modification antagonizes ubiquitination and thus degradation of I
B
. The switch between the ubiquitination and the sumoylation mode is regulated by phosphorylation so that the unphosphorylated I
B
favors the SUMO-1 incorporation, whereas phosphorylation triggers the ubiquitination and degradation. Likewise, studies of PML and c-Jun have shown inhibition of sumoylation upon induction of phosphorylation (39, 40). In the case of c-Jun, the unphosphorylated state of serines 63 and 73 promotes sumoylation of lysine 229, demonstrating that mutual proximity of the modification sites in the primary structure is not necessarily required for the cooperative regulation (39). Intriguingly, our study of HSF1 provides an example opposite to those mentioned above, showing that phosphorylation can also positively regulate sumoylation. The spatial proximity of the sumoylation site and the regulatory phosphorylation site suggests that phosphorylation could change HSF1 conformation, thereby exposing the SUMO target lysine to the modification machinery. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that the S303/7D mutant mimicking phosphorylated HSF1 was a preferred substrate in the in vitro sumoylation assay that utilized only purified E1 and E2 enzymes together with SUMO-1. Furthermore, we did not detect any difference between the localization of the wild-type HSF1 and that of the S303A mutant, ruling out the possibility that phosphorylation would regulate HSF1 sumoylation through subcellular targeting. Ongoing studies of the in vivo components belonging to the HSF1-specific sumoylation machinery as well as the phosphorylation-mediated signaling cascade will hopefully further elucidate the interrelationship between these two posttranslational modifications and ultimately unravel the regulation of HSF1 SUMO-1 modification.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by the Academy of Finland, the Finnish Cancer Organizations, the Sigrid Jusélius Foundation, and the Borg Foundation (Åbo Akademi University). V.H. and M.H. were supported by the Turku Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Present address: Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Cell Biology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. ![]()
Present address: Hormos Medical Corp., FIN-20520 Turku, Finland. ![]()
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2. Ben-Neriah, Y. 2002. Regulatory functions of ubiquitination in the immune system. Nat. Immunol. 3:20-26.[CrossRef][Medline]
3. Bies, J., J. Markus, and L. Wolff. 2002. Covalent attachment of the SUMO-1 protein to the negative regulatory domain of the c-Myb transcription factor modifies its stability and transactivation capacity. J. Biol. Chem. 277:8999-9009.
4. Chu, B., F. Soncin, B. D. Price, M. A. Stevenson, and S. K. Calderwood. 1996. Sequential phosphorylation by mitogen-activated protein kinase and glycogen synthase kinase 3 represses transcriptional activation by heat shock factor-1. J. Biol. Chem. 271:30847-30857.
5. Chu, B., R. Zhong, F. Soncin, M. A. Stevenson, and S. K. Calderwood. 1998. Transcriptional activity of heat shock factor 1 at 37°C is repressed through phosphorylation on two distinct serine residues by glycogen synthase kinase 3 and protein kinases C
and C
. J. Biol. Chem. 273:18640-18646.
6. Cotto, J., S. Fox, and R. Morimoto. 1997. HSF1 granules: a novel stress-induced nuclear compartment of human cells. J. Cell Sci. 110:2925-2934.[Abstract]
7. Cotto, J. J., M. Kline, and R. I. Morimoto. 1996. Activation of heat shock factor 1 DNA binding precedes stress-induced serine phosphorylation. Evidence for a multistep pathway of regulation. J. Biol. Chem. 271:3355-3358.
8. Dai, R., W. Frejtag, B. He, Y. Zhang, and N. F. Mivechi. 2000. c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase targeting and phosphorylation of heat shock factor-1 suppress its transcriptional activity. J. Biol. Chem. 275:18210-18218.
9. Desterro, J. M., M. S. Rodriguez, and R. T. Hay. 1998. SUMO-1 modification of I
B
inhibits NF-
B activation. Mol. Cell 2:233-239.[CrossRef][Medline]
10. Duprez, E., A. J. Saurin, J. M. Desterro, V. Lallemand-Breitenbach, K. Howe, M. N. Boddy, E. Solomon, H. de The, R. T. Hay, and P. S. Freemont. 1999. SUMO-1 modification of the acute promyelocytic leukaemia protein PML: implications for nuclear localisation. J. Cell Sci. 112:381-393.[Abstract]
11. Eloranta, J. J., and H. C. Hurst. 2002. Transcription factor AP-2 interacts with the SUMO-conjugating enzyme UBC9 and is sumolated in vivo. J. Biol. Chem. 277:30798-30804.
12. Fogal, V., M. Gostissa, P. Sandy, P. Zacchi, T. Sternsdorf, K. Jensen, P. P. Pandolfi, H. Will, C. Schneider, and G. Del Sal. 2000. Regulation of p53 activity in nuclear bodies by a specific PML isoform. EMBO J. 19:6185-6195.[CrossRef][Medline]
13. Gostissa, M., A. Hengstermann, V. Fogal, P. Sandy, S. E. Schwarz, M. Scheffner, and G. Del Sal. 1999. Activation of p53 by conjugation to the ubiquitin-like protein SUMO-1. EMBO J. 18:6462-6471.[CrossRef][Medline]
14. Green, M., T. J. Schuetz, E. K. Sullivan, and R. E. Kingston. 1995. A heat shock-responsive domain of human HSF1 that regulates transcription activation domain function. Mol. Cell. Biol. 15:3354-3362.[Abstract]
15. Hartl, F. U., and M. Hayer-Hartl. 2002. Molecular chaperones in the cytosol: from nascent chain to folded protein. Science 295:1852-1858.
16. He, B., Y. H. Meng, and N. F. Mivechi. 1998. Glycogen synthase kinase 3ß and extracellular signal-regulated kinase inactivate heat shock transcription factor 1 by facilitating the disappearance of transcriptionally active granules after heat shock. Mol. Cell. Biol. 18:6624-6633.
17. Holmberg, C. I., V. Hietakangas, A. Mikhailov, J. O. Rantanen, M. Kallio, A. Meinander, J. Hellman, N. Morrice, C. MacKintosh, R. I. Morimoto, J. E. Eriksson, and L. Sistonen. 2001. Phosphorylation of serine 230 promotes inducible transcriptional activity of heat shock factor 1. EMBO J. 20:3800-3810.[CrossRef][Medline]
18. Holmberg, C. I., S. A. Illman, M. Kallio, A. Mikhailov, and L. Sistonen. 2000. Formation of nuclear HSF1 granules varies depending on stress stimuli. Cell Stress Chaperones 5:219-228.[CrossRef][Medline]
19. Hong, Y., R. Rogers, M. J. Matunis, C. N. Mayhew, M. Goodson, O.-K. Park-Sarge, and K. D. Sarge. 2001. Regulation of heat shock transcription factor 1 by stress-induced SUMO-1 modification. J. Biol. Chem. 276:40263-40267.
20. Ishov, A. M., A. G. Sotnikov, D. Negorev, O. V. Vladimirova, N. Neff, T. Kamitani, E. T. Yeh, J. F. Strauss III, and G. G. Maul. 1999. PML is critical for ND10 formation and recruits the PML-interacting protein daxx to this nuclear structure when modified by SUMO-1. J. Cell Biol. 147:221-234.
21. Jackson, P. K. 2001. A new RING for SUMO: wrestling transcriptional responses into nuclear bodies with PIAS family E3 SUMO ligases. Genes Dev. 15:3053-3058.
22. Johnson, E. S., and G. Blobel. 1997. Ubc9p is the conjugating enzyme for the ubiquitin-like protein Smt3p. J. Biol. Chem. 272:26799-26802.
23. Johnson, E. S., and A. A. Gupta. 2001. An E3-like factor that promotes SUMO conjugation to the yeast septins. Cell 106:735-744.[CrossRef][Medline]
24. Johnson, E. S., I. Schwienhorst, R. J. Dohmen, and G. Blobel. 1997. The ubiquitin-like protein Smt3p is activated for conjugation to other proteins by an Aos1p/Uba2p heterodimer. EMBO J. 16:5509-5519.[CrossRef][Medline]
25. Jolly, C., and R. I. Morimoto. 1999. Stress and the cell nucleus: dynamics of gene expression and structural reorganization. Gene Expr. 7:261-270.[Medline]
26. Jolly, C., L. Konecny, D. L. Grady, Y. A. Kutskova, J. J. Cotto, R. I. Morimoto, and C. Vourc'h. 2002. In vivo binding of active heat shock transcription factor 1 to human chromosome 9 heterochromatin during stress. J. Cell Biol. 156:775-781.
27. Jolly, C., R. I. Morimoto, M. Robert-Nicoud, and C. Vourc'h. 1997. HSF1 transcription factor concentrates in nuclear foci during heat shock: relationship with transcription sites. J. Cell Sci. 110:2935-2941.[Abstract]
28. Jolly, C., Y. Usson, and R. I. Morimoto. 1999. Rapid and reversible relocalization of heat shock factor 1 within seconds to nuclear stress granules. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96:6769-6774.
29. Kahyo, T., T. Nishida, and H. Yasuda. 2001. Involvement of PIAS1 in the sumoylation of tumor suppressor p53. Mol. Cell 8:713-718.[CrossRef][Medline]
30. Kirsh, O., J. S. Seeler, A. Pichler, A. Gast, S. Muller, E. Miska, M. Mathieu, A. Harel-Bellan, T. Kouzarides, F. Melchior, and A. Dejean. 2002. The SUMO E3 ligase RanBP2 promotes modification of the HDAC4 deacetylase. EMBO J. 21:2682-2691.[CrossRef][Medline]
31. Kline, M. P., and R. I. Morimoto. 1997. Repression of the heat shock factor 1 transcriptional activation domain is modulated by constitutive phosphorylation. Mol. Cell. Biol. 17:2107-2115.[Abstract]
32. Knauf, U., E. M. Newton, J. Kyriakis, and R. E. Kingston. 1996. Repression of human heat shock factor 1 activity at control temperature by phosphorylation. Genes Dev. 10:2782-2793.
33. Kotaja, N., U. Karvonen, O. A. Jänne, and J. J. Palvimo. 2002. PIAS proteins modulate transcription factors by functioning as SUMO-1 ligases. Mol. Cell. Biol. 22:5222-5234.
34. Lindquist, S., and E. A. Craig. 1988. The heat-shock proteins. Annu. Rev. Genet. 22:631-677.[CrossRef][Medline]
35. McMillan, D. R., X. Xiao, L. Shao, K. Graves, and I. J. Benjamin. 1998. Targeted disruption of heat shock transcription factor 1 abolishes thermotolerance and protection against heat-inducible apoptosis. J. Biol. Chem. 273:7523-7528.
36. Melchior, F. 2000. SUMOnonclassical ubiquitin. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 16:591-626.[CrossRef][Medline]
37. Morimoto, R. I. 1998. Regulation of the heat shock transcriptional response: cross talk between a family of heat shock factors, molecular chaperones, and negative regulators. Genes Dev. 12:3788-3796.
38. Mosser, D. D., N. G. Theodorakis, and R. I. Morimoto. 1988. Coordinate changes in heat shock element-binding activity and HSP70 gene transcription rates in human cells. Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:4736-4744.
39. Müller, S., M. Berger, F. Lehembre, J. S. Seeler, Y. Haupt, and A. Dejean. 2000. c-Jun and p53 activity is modulated by SUMO-1 modification. J. Biol. Chem. 275:13321-13329.
40. Müller, S., M. J. Matunis, and A. Dejean. 1998. Conjugation with the ubiquitin-related modifier SUMO-1 regulates the partitioning of PML within the nucleus. EMBO J. 17:61-70.[CrossRef][Medline]
41. Nakai, A., M. Tanabe, Y. Kawazoe, J. Inazawa, R. I. Morimoto, and K. Nagata. 1997. HSF4, a new member of the human heat shock factor family which lacks properties of a transcriptional activator. Mol. Cell. Biol. 17:469-481.[Abstract]
42. Newton, E. M., U. Knauf, M. Green, and R. E. Kingston. 1996. The regulatory domain of human heat shock factor 1 is sufficient to sense heat stress. Mol. Cell. Biol. 16:839-846.[Abstract]
43. Pichler, A., A. Gast, J. S. Seeler, A. Dejean, and F. Melchior. 2002. The nucleoporin RanBP2 has SUMO1 E3 ligase activity. Cell 108:109-120.[CrossRef][Medline]
44. Pirkkala, L., T.-P. Alastalo, X. Zuo, I. J. Benjamin, and L. Sistonen. 2000. Disruption of heat shock factor 1 reveals an essential role in the ubiquitin proteolytic pathway. Mol. Cell. Biol. 20:2670-2675.
45. Pirkkala, L., P. Nykänen, and L. Sistonen. 2001. Roles of the heat shock transcription factors in regulation of the heat shock response and beyond. FASEB J. 15:1118-1131.
46. Poukka, H., U. Karvonen, O. A. Jänne, and J. J. Palvimo. 2000. Covalent modification of the androgen receptor by small ubiquitin-like modifier 1 (SUMO-1). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97:14145-14150.
47. Rabindran, S. K., G. Giorgi, J. Clos, and C. Wu. 1991. Molecular cloning and expression of a human heat shock factor, HSF1. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:6906-6910.
48. Rodriguez, M. S., C. Dargemont, and R. T. Hay. 2001. SUMO-1 conjugation in vivo requires both a consensus modification motif and nuclear targeting. J. Biol. Chem. 276:12654-12659.
49. Rodriguez, M. S., J. M. Desterro, S. Lain, C. A. Midgley, D. P. Lane, and R. T. Hay. 1999. SUMO-1 modification activates the transcriptional response of p53. EMBO J. 18:6455-6461.[CrossRef][Medline]
50. Sachdev, S., L. Bruhn, H. Sieber, A. Pichler, F. Melchior, and R. Grosschedl. 2001. PIASy, a nuclear matrix-associated SUMO E3 ligase, represses LEF1 activity by sequestration into nuclear bodies. Genes Dev. 15:3088-3103.
51. Saitoh, H., and J. Hinchey. 2000. Functional heterogeneity of small ubiquitin-related protein modifiers SUMO-1 versus SUMO-2/3. J. Biol. Chem. 275:6252-6258.
52. Sapetschnig, A., G. Rischitor, H. Braun, A. Doll, M. Schergaut, F. Melchior, and G. Suske. 2002. Transcription factor Sp3 is silenced through SUMO modification by PIAS1. EMBO J. 21:5206-5215.[CrossRef][Medline]
53. Sarge, K. D., S. P. Murphy, and R. I. Morimoto. 1993. Activation of heat shock gene transcription by heat shock factor 1 involves oligomerization, acquisition of DNA-binding activity, and nuclear localization and can occur in the absence of stress. Mol. Cell. Biol. 13:1392-1407.
54. Sarge, K. D., V. Zimarino, K. Holm, C. Wu, and R. I. Morimoto. 1991. Cloning and characterization of two mouse heat shock factors with distinct inducible and constitutive DNA-binding ability. Genes Dev. 5:1902-1911.
55. Schmidt, D., and S. Müller. 2002. Members of the PIAS family act as SUMO ligases for c-Jun and p53 and repress p53 activity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99:2872-2877.