Translation elongation factor eEF1A1 protein which orchestrates the entire process of the heat shock response has been discovered by scientists.

"It's a bit early, but we think that eventually we could design small-molecule activators and inhibitors that tweak the heat shock response," says Evgeny Nudler, PhD, the study's senior investigator and the Julie Wilson Anderson Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at NYU Langone. "eEF1A1 controls every single step of the heat shock response simultaneously."
Nudler, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, says his team's latest research shows that eEF1A1 activates transcription by recruiting a key transcription factor to heat shock genes. It also stabilizes HSP mRNAs and helps to transport these RNAs outside the cell nucleus and delivers them to the cell's ribosome for protein synthesis. In this way, Nudler says, it orchestrates the entire process of manufacturing HSPs in response to stress. HSPs then bind to other proteins, preventing their toxic aggregation.
The eEF1A protein is expressed in two similar forms, 1 and 2, in different tissues. Nudler and colleagues show, for example, that motor neurons express form 2 (eEF1A2), which does not support the heat shock response. They believe that this is the reason why these specialized cells cannot mount the heat shock response and therefore are particularly vulnerable to stress and diseases such as ALS. The challenge in drug development will be restoring the heat shock response in motor neurons by modulating the activity of eEF1A.
Nudler's laboratory used various human and mouse cell lines in this work. Maria Vera, PhD, a former member of Nudler's laboratory, was the lead study investigator. Other key study participants include Bibhusita Pani, PhD, also from Nudler's lab; Robert Singer, PhD, from Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, NY; and Cathy Abbott, PhD, from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Source-Eurekalert
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