Evidence for the Involvement of Mouse Heat Shock Factor 1 in the Atypical Expression of the HSP70.1 Heat Shock Gene during Mouse Zygotic Genome Activation
Open Access
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 17 (2) , 778-788
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.17.2.778
Abstract
The mouse HSP70.1 gene, which codes for a heat shock protein (hsp70), is highly transcribed at the onset of zygotic genome activation (ZGA). This expression, which occurs in the absence of stress, is then repressed. It has been claimed that this gene does not exhibit a stress response until the blastocyst stage. The promoter of HSP70.1 contains four heat shock element (HSE) boxes which are the binding sites of heat shock transcription factors (HSF). We have been studying the presence and localization of the mouse HSFs, mHSF1 and mHSF2, at different stages of embryo development. We show that mHSF1 is already present at the one-cell stage and concentrated in the nucleus. Moreover, by mutagenizing HSE sequences and performing competition experiments (in transgenic embryos with the HSP70.1 promoter inserted before a reporter gene), we show that, in contrast with previous findings, HSE boxes are involved in this spontaneous activation. Therefore, we suggest that HSF1 and HSE are important in this transient expression at the two-cell stage and that the absence of typical inducibility at this early stage of development results mainly from the high level of spontaneous transcription of this gene during the ZGA.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Displacement of sequence-specific transcription factors from mitotic chromatinCell, 1995
- Regulated Expression of Heat Shock Factor 1 Isoforms with Distinct Leucine Zipper Arrays via Tissue-Dependent Alternative SplicingBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1995
- Hydrophobic coiled-coil domains regulate the subcellular localization of human heat shock factor 2.Genes & Development, 1993
- Cloning and characterization of two mouse heat shock factors with distinct inducible and constitutive DNA-binding ability.Genes & Development, 1991
- Molecular cloning and expression of a hexameric Drosophila heat shock factor subject to negative regulationCell, 1990
- Characterization and sequence of a mouse hsp70 gene and its expression in mouse cell linesGene, 1990
- Site-directed mutagenesis by overlap extension using the polymerase chain reactionGene, 1989
- Competitive Inhibition of hsp70 Gene Expression Causes ThermosensitivityScience, 1988
- Expression of the major heat shock protein (hsp 70) family during early mouse embryo developmentTeratogenesis, Carcinogenesis, and Mutagenesis, 1986
- Heat does not induce synthesis of heat shock proteins or thermotolerance in the earliest stage of mouse embryo developmentInternational Journal of Hyperthermia, 1985