화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.472, No.4, 580-584, 2016
Heat shock modulates the subcellular localization, stability, and activity of HIPK2
The homeodomain-interacting protein kinase-2 (HIPK2) is a highly conserved serineithreonine kinase and is involved in transcriptional regulation. HIPK2 is a highly unstable protein, and is kept at a low level under normal physiological conditions. However, exposure of cells to physiological stress such as hypoxia, oxidative stress, or UV damage is known to stabilize HIPK2, leading to the HIPK2-dependent activation of p53 and the cell death pathway. Therefore HIPK2 is also known as a stress kinase and as a stress-activated pro-apoptotic factor. We demonstrate here that exposure of cells to heat shock results in the stabilization of HIPK2 and the stabilization is mediated via K63-linked ubiquitination. Intriguingly, a sub-lethal heat shock (42 degrees C, 1 h) results in the cytoplasmic localization of HIPK2, while a lethal heat shock (45 degrees C, 1 h) results in its nuclear localization. Cells exposed to the lethal heat shock showed significantly higher levels of the p53 activity than those exposed to the sub-lethal thermal stress, suggesting that both the level and the nuclear localization are essential for the pro-apoptotic activity of HIPK2 and that the lethal heat shock could retain the HIPK2 in the nucleus to promote the cell death. Taken together our study underscores the importance of HIPK2 in stress mediated cell death, and that the HIPK2 is a generic stress kinase that gets activated by diverse set of physiological stressors. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.