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Review
. 2025 Jun 25;14(13):979.
doi: 10.3390/cells14130979.

Modulation of Heat Shock Proteins Levels in Health and Disease: An Integrated Perspective in Diagnostics and Therapy

Affiliations
Review

Modulation of Heat Shock Proteins Levels in Health and Disease: An Integrated Perspective in Diagnostics and Therapy

Elena Mikhailova et al. Cells. .

Abstract

Heat shock proteins belong to a highly conserved family of chaperone proteins, and in addition to their participation in the regulation of cellular proteostasis (folding of polypeptides and proteins, disaggregation of incorrectly folded peptides, and participation in autophagy processes), also play a significant immunomodulatory role in both innate and adaptive immunity. Changes in the HSP level, both downwards (e.g., in neurodegenerative diseases) and upwards (e.g., autoimmune, oncological diseases), underlie the pathogenesis of many somatic and oncological pathologies. In this review, we consider the main physiological mechanisms of HSP level regulation and also analyze pharmacological, genetically engineered methods of modulating the chaperone level, citing the advantages and disadvantages of a particular method of influence. In conclusion, modulation of the HSP level, according to numerous preclinical studies, can have a significant impact on the course of various pathological conditions, which, in turn, can be used to develop new therapeutic approaches, when the effect on the level of chaperones can be used as monotherapy or as an adjuvant method of action.

Keywords: HSF; HSP70; HSP90; biomarker; chaperones; heat shock proteins; inhibitors.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Signaling pathways activated by STAT1, STAT3, NF-IL6, and p53, and the heat shock response (HSR) through HSF1, which binds to the heat shock element (HSE) and modulates the transcription of heat shock proteins, the dysregulation of which is associated with various pathological diseases (modified from Stephanou A, Latchman DS, 2011 [25]).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Strategies for generating transgenic animals (Lampreht Tratar et al., 2018 [118]): (A) retroviral approach, where embryo cells are infected using retroviral vectors at early development stages before implantation into a recipient female (rarely used); (B) microinjection method, the standard transgenic approach, where DNA is inserted into the genome in a non-specific manner; and (C) injection of genetically modified embryonic stem cells into a pre-implantation embryo at early development states. This is a gene-targeting transgenic approach, typically used to create knock-out transgenic mice with constitutive loss-of-function mutations.

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