[No authors listed]
âHeat-shock factor 1 (âHSF1) orchestrates the heat-shock response in eukaryotes. Although this pathway has evolved to help cells adapt in the presence of challenging conditions, it is co-opted in cancer to support malignancy. However, the mechanisms that regulate âHSF1 and thus cellular stress response are poorly understood. Here we show that the ubiquitin ligase âFBXW7α interacts with âHSF1 through a conserved motif phosphorylated by âGSK3β and âERK1. âFBXW7α ubiquitylates âHSF1 and loss of âFBXW7α results in impaired degradation of nuclear âHSF1 and defective heat-shock response attenuation. âFBXW7α is either mutated or transcriptionally downregulated in melanoma and âHSF1 nuclear stabilization correlates with increased metastatic potential and disease progression. âFBXW7α deficiency and subsequent âHSF1 accumulation activates an invasion-supportive transcriptional program and enhances the metastatic potential of human melanoma cells. These findings identify a post-translational mechanism of regulation of the âHSF1 transcriptional program both in the presence of exogenous stress and in cancer.
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