[HTML][HTML] Heat shock protein 70 is a potent activator of the human complement system

Z Prohászka, M Singh, K Nagy, E Kiss… - Cell stress & …, 2002 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Z Prohászka, M Singh, K Nagy, E Kiss, G Lakos, J Duba, G Füst
Cell stress & chaperones, 2002ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
According to new hypotheses, extracellular heat shock proteins (Hsps) may represent an
ancestral danger signal of cellular death or lysis-activating innate immunity. Recent studies
demonstrating a dual role for Hsp70 as both a chaperone and cytokine, inducing potent
proinflammatory response in human monocytes, provided support for the hypothesis that
extracellular Hsp is a messenger of stress. Our previous work focused on the complement-
activating ability of human Hsp60. We demonstrated that Hsp60 complexed with specific …
Abstract
According to new hypotheses, extracellular heat shock proteins (Hsps) may represent an ancestral danger signal of cellular death or lysis-activating innate immunity. Recent studies demonstrating a dual role for Hsp70 as both a chaperone and cytokine, inducing potent proinflammatory response in human monocytes, provided support for the hypothesis that extracellular Hsp is a messenger of stress. Our previous work focused on the complement-activating ability of human Hsp60. We demonstrated that Hsp60 complexed with specific antibodies induces a strong classical pathway (CP) activation. Here, we show that another chaperone molecule also possesses complement-activating ability. Solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was applied for the experiments. Human Hsp70 activated the CP independently of antibodies. No complement activation was found in the case of human Hsp90. Our data further support the hypothesis that chaperones may messenger stress to other cells. Complement-like molecules and primitive immune cells appeared together early in evolution. A joint action of these arms of innate immunity in response to free chaperones, the most abundant cellular proteins displaying a stress signal, may further strengthen the effectiveness of immune reactions.
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