Evolution of heat-shock protein expression underlying adaptive responses to environmental stress.
Bing ChenMartin E FederLe KangPublished in: Molecular ecology (2018)
Heat-shock proteins (Hsps) and their cognates are primary mitigators of cell stress. With increasingly severe impacts of climate change and other human modifications of the biosphere, the ability of the heat-shock system to affect evolutionary fitness in environments outside the laboratory and to evolve in response is topic of growing importance. Since the last major reviews, several advances have occurred. First, demonstrations of the heat-shock response outside the laboratory now include many additional taxa and environments. Many of these demonstrations are only correlative, however. More importantly, technical advances in "omic" quantification of nucleic acids and proteins, genomewide association analysis, and manipulation of genes and their expression have enabled the field to move beyond correlation. Several consequent advances are already evident: The pathway from heat-shock gene expression to stress tolerance in nature can be extremely complex, mediated through multiple biological processes and systems, and even multiple species. The underlying genes are more numerous, diverse and variable than previously appreciated, especially with respect to their regulatory variation and epigenetic changes. The impacts and limitations (e.g., due to trade-offs) of natural selection on these genes have become more obvious and better established. At last, as evolutionary capacitors, Hsps may have distinctive impacts on the evolution of other genes and ecological consequences.
Keyphrases
- heat shock
- heat shock protein
- genome wide
- heat stress
- gene expression
- climate change
- dna methylation
- poor prognosis
- genome wide identification
- bioinformatics analysis
- oxidative stress
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- genome wide analysis
- binding protein
- single cell
- stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- body composition
- stress induced
- cell therapy
- systematic review
- risk assessment
- pluripotent stem cells