1. Heat shock proteins in human cancer
- Author
-
Pierre-Alain Binz, Paolo Mocarelli, and Cecilia Sarto
- Subjects
HSPA14 ,HSPA12A ,Protein Conformation ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Biology ,Protein aggregation ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Cell biology ,Hsp70 ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,HSPA4 ,Heat shock factor ,Neoplasms ,Heat shock protein ,Animals ,Humans ,HSP60 ,Heat-Shock Proteins - Abstract
The heat shock proteins (hsp) are ubiquitous molecules induced in cells exposed to sublethal heat shock, present in all living cells, and highly conserved during evolution. Their function is to protect cells from environmental stress damage by binding to partially denatured proteins, dissociating protein aggregates, to regulate the correct folding, and to cooperate in transporting newly synthesized polypeptides to the target organelles. The molecular chaperones are involved in numerous diseases, including cancer, revealing changes of expression. In this review, we mainly describe the relationship of hsp expression with human cancer, and discuss what is known about their post-translational modifications according to malignancies.
- Published
- 2000