Heat Shock Response in Neurodegeneration
Overview The heat shock response (HSR) is a highly conserved cellular protective mechanism activated by proteotoxic stress, including misfolded proteins, oxidative damage, and metabolic disruption. The HSR is mediated by heat shock factors (HSFs) that induce the expression of heat shock proteins (HSPs), molecular chaperones that prevent protein aggregation, facilitate refolding, and promote protein homeostasis. In neurodegenerative diseases, the HSR is frequently overwhelmed, making it an attractive therapeutic target.
Heat Shock Factor Family
HSF1: The Master Regulator HSF1 is the primary transcription factor governing the HSR:
Activation: Trimerization and DNA binding in response to proteotoxic stress
Targets: HSP70, HSP90, HSP40, small HSPs (HSPB family)
Regulation: Negative feedback through HSP90-HSF1 complex dissociation
Post-translational modifications: Phosphorylation, acetylation, sumoylation fine-tune activity
HSF2 and HSF4
HSF2: Involved in development and synaptic function
HSF4: Expressed in neuronal populations; protective role in some contexts
Heat Shock Proteins in Neurodegeneration
HSP70 Family The HSP70 family is the central effector of the HSR:
HSP70 (HSPA1A/HSP72): Inducible stress response protein, strongest neuroprotective effects
HSP73 (HSPA8/HSC70): Constitutively expressed, involved in protein folding and trafficking
BiP/GRP78 (HSPA5): ER-resident HSP70, central to unfolded protein response
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Heat Shock Response in Neurodegeneration
Overview The heat shock response (HSR) is a highly conserved cellular protective mechanism activated by proteotoxic stress, including misfolded proteins, oxidative damage, and metabolic disruption. The HSR is mediated by heat shock factors (HSFs) that induce the expression of heat shock proteins (HSPs), molecular chaperones that prevent protein aggregation, facilitate refolding, and promote protein homeostasis. In neurodegenerative diseases, the HSR is frequently overwhelmed, making it an attractive therapeutic target.
Heat Shock Factor Family
HSF1: The Master Regulator HSF1 is the primary transcription factor governing the HSR:
Activation: Trimerization and DNA binding in response to proteotoxic stress
Targets: HSP70, HSP90, HSP40, small HSPs (HSPB family)
Regulation: Negative feedback through HSP90-HSF1 complex dissociation
Post-translational modifications: Phosphorylation, acetylation, sumoylation fine-tune activity
HSF2 and HSF4
HSF2: Involved in development and synaptic function
HSF4: Expressed in neuronal populations; protective role in some contexts
Heat Shock Proteins in Neurodegeneration
HSP70 Family The HSP70 family is the central effector of the HSR:
HSP70 (HSPA1A/HSP72): Inducible stress response protein, strongest neuroprotective effects
HSP73 (HSPA8/HSC70): Constitutively expressed, involved in protein folding and trafficking
BiP/GRP78 (HSPA5): ER-resident HSP70, central to unfolded protein response
Neurodegeneration relevance:
HSP70 overexpression prevents alpha-synuclein aggregation in PD models
HSP70 reduces tau phosphorylation and aggregation in AD models
HSP70 mitigates SOD1 aggregation in ALS models
HSP70 enhances autophagy of damaged proteins
HSP90 Family HSP90 maintains client protein stability:
HSP90α/β: Cytosolic HSP90 isoforms
TRAP1: Mitochondrial HSP90
GRP94 (HSP90B1): ER-resident HSP90
Neurodegeneration relevance:
HSP90 stabilizes tau, promoting pathological phosphorylation
HSP90 co-factors (p23, HSF90AB1) implicated in aggregation
HSP90 inhibitors promote tau degradation via HSF1 activation
Small HSPs (HSPB Family) | Protein | Function | Neurodegeneration Role | |---------|----------|------------------------| | αB-crystallin (HSPB5) | Protein aggregation prevention | Elevated in AD/PD brains; protective in models | | Hsp27 (HSPB1) | Cytoskeletal protection | Prevents neurofilament aggregation | | Hsp20 (HSPB6) | Smooth muscle relaxation | Neuroprotective in stroke | | CRYAB (HSPB4) | Lens protein, stress protection | Mutations cause cataracts; link to neurodegeneration |
Molecular Mechanisms
Chaperone-Assisted Protein Folding HSR-induced HSPs prevent protein misfolding through coordinated mechanisms:
Mermaid diagram (expand to render)
Key steps:
HSR-induced HSPs prevent protein misfolding:
Substrate recognition: HSP40 co-chaperones deliver misfolded clients to HSP70
ATP-dependent folding: HSP70 cycles through ADP/ATP states to facilitate folding
Co-translational quality control: HSP70/HSP90 coordinate nascent chain folding
Regulated client release: nucleotide exchange factors (NEFs) release folded proteins
Suppression of Protein Aggregation HSPs directly suppress pathogenic protein aggregation:
Sequestration: HSP70 binds aggregation-prone intermediates
Disaggregation: HSP104 (yeast) and HSP70/HSP40 systems disentangle aggregates
Refolding: ATP-dependent chaperone systems resolve misfolded proteins
Targeting to degradation: Client proteins transferred to proteasome or autophagy
HSF1 Transcriptional Activation
Cross-Disease Relevance
Alzheimer's Disease
Aβ toxicity: HSP70 reduces Aβ-induced neuronal death
Tau pathology: HSP90 inhibition reduces tau levels via proteasomal degradation
Synaptic protection: HSP70 preserves synaptic function in AD models
Therapeutic approach: HSP90 inhibitors (17-AAG, Geldanamycin analogs)
Parkinson's Disease
α-Synuclein aggregation: HSP70 prevents aggregation and toxicity
LRRK2 mutations: HSP90 stabilizes mutant LRRK2; inhibitors promote degradation
Mitochondrial stress: HSP60, HSP10 protect mitochondrial proteins
Therapeutic approach: HSP70 inducers (geranylgeranylacetone, celastrol)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
SOD1 aggregation: HSP70, HSP110, HSP40 suppress mutant SOD1 aggregation
TDP-43 pathology: HSP70 helps manage TDP-43 misfolding
C9orf72 repeats: HSP70 family modulates repeat-associated toxicity
Therapeutic approach: HSP70 overexpression; small molecule inducers
Huntington's Disease
mHtt aggregation: HSP70, HSP40 suppress mutant huntingtin aggregation
Transcription dysregulation: HSF1 activation restores transcription deficits
Axonal transport: HSP90 maintains cytoskeletal integrity
Therapeutic approach: HSP90 inhibitors reduce mHtt levels
Therapeutic Strategies
HSP90 Inhibitors Mechanism: Inhibition releases HSF1 from HSP90 complex, activating HSR
| Drug | Stage | Notes | |------|-------|-------| | Geldanamycin | Preclinical | Natural product; hepatotoxic | | 17-AAG (Tanespimycin) | Phase I/II | HSP90 inhibitor; tested in AD/ALS | | 17-DMAG (Alvespimycin) | Phase I | Improved solubility | | PU-H71 | Preclinical | Selective for tumor HSP90; CNS penetration? | | PU-DZ8 | Preclinical | Better CNS penetration |
Clinical trials:
NCT03748703: HSP90 inhibitor in ALS (completed)
NCT04044547: HSP90 inhibitor in AD (ongoing)
HSP70 Inducers Mechanism: Direct HSF1 activation increases HSP70 expression
| Compound | Mechanism | Evidence | |----------|-----------|----------| | Geranylgeranylacetone (GGA) | HSF1 activator | Gastroprotective; neuroprotective in models | | Celastrol | HSF1 activator | Anti-inflammatory; neuroprotective | | BGP-15 | HSP70 inducer | Niaspan analog; tested in PD | | Arimoclomol | HSP70 co-inducer | Failed in ALS Phase III |
Clinical trials:
NCT02258087: BGP-15 in Parkinson's disease (completed, mixed results)
NCT00706147: Arimoclomol in ALS (Phase III, failed primary endpoint)
Gene Therapy Approaches
AAV-HSP70: Viral delivery of HSP70 to brain regions
AAV-HSF1: Constitutively active HSF1 for sustained HSR
Cell therapy: MSC-based delivery of HSP70
Biomarker Connections
CSF HSP70: Elevated in some AD/PD patients
Blood HSP70: Correlates with disease severity in PD
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells: HSP70 expression as treatment response marker
Clinical Trial Data | Trial | Phase | Target | Outcome | |-------|-------|--------|---------| | HSP90i ALS | Phase I/II | SOD1/ALS | Safety, biomarkers | | BGP-15 PD | Phase II | Neuroprotection | Mixed motor outcomes | | Arimoclomol ALS | Phase III | FUS/SOD1 | Failed primary endpoint |
Future Directions
Blood-brain barrier penetration: Develop HSP90 inhibitors with improved CNS penetration
Selectivity: HSP90 isoform-selective inhibitors to reduce off-target effects
Combination therapy: HSP90 inhibition + immunotherapy for synergistic effects
Biomarker development: Validate HSP70/HSP90 as treatment response markers
HSF1 agonists: Direct HSF1 activators as safer alternatives to HSP90 inhibitors
See Also
[Integrated Stress Response in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/integrated-stress-response)
[Nrf2 Oxidative Stress Response](/mechanisms/nrf2-oxidative-stress)
[Proteostasis Network in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/proteostasis-network)
[HSP70 Protein](/proteins/hsp70-protein)
[HSP90 Protein](/proteins/hsp90-protein)
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