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Genes to Cells (2007) 12, 487-499. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2443.2007.01069.x
© 2007 Blackwell Publishing or its licensors

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Heat shock transcription factor 1 down-regulates spermatocyte-specific 70 kDa heat shock protein expression prior to the induction of apoptosis in mouse testes

Wieslawa Widlak*,1, Natalia Vydra1, Ewa Malusecka1, Volha Dudaladava1, Boleslaw Winiarski1, Dorota Scieglinska1 and Piotr Widlak2

1 Departments of Tumor Biology, and
2 Experimental and Clinical Radiobiology, Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, Gliwice Branch, 44-101 Gliwice, Poland

Expression of constitutively active heat shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1) in mouse spermatocytes induces apoptosis and leads to male infertility. We report here that prior to the onset of massive apoptosis caused by expression of active HSF1 in spermatocytes a marked reduction in spermatocyte-specific Hsp70.2 mRNA and protein levels occurs. In addition, HSP70.2 protein relocalizes from a predominant cytoplasmic to a nuclear position in developing spermatocytes that express active HSF1. Later in the developmental stages, cells undergoing HSF1-induced apoptosis essentially lack the HSP70.2 protein. The down-regulation of Hsp70.2 gene expression by HSF1 is paradoxical because HSF1 is the prototypical activator of HSP genes. Furthermore, HSF1-mediated repression neither involved a heat shock element (HSE)-like sequence adjacent to the Hsp70.2 gene nor were Hsp70.2 promoter sequences associated directly with HSF1. Interestingly, other spermatocyte- and spermatid-specific transcripts are also down-regulated in testes of transgenic mice expressing active HSF1, suggesting involvement of a putative HSF1-dependent block of development of spermatogenic cells. Importantly however, transcription of the Hsp70.2 gene is down-regulated in testes of wild-type mice subjected to a hyperthermia that induces transient activation of HSF1, indicating that the spermatocyte-specific activity of HSF1 might misdirect a network of transcription factors required for proper regulation of Hsp70.2.


Communicated by: Fuyuki Ishikawa

* Correspondence: E-mail: wwidlak{at}io.gliwice.pl







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