Purification and Properties of <i>Drosophila</i> Heat Shock Activator Protein

Carl Wu(National Institutes of Health), Susan E. Wilson(National Institutes of Health), Barbara Walker(National Institutes of Health), Igor B. Dawid(National Institute of Child Health), Thomas Paisley(National Institutes of Health), Vincenzo Zimarino(National Institutes of Health), Hitoshi Ueda(National Institutes of Health)
Science
November 27, 1987
Cited by 389

Abstract

Drosophila heat shock activator protein, a rare transacting factor which is induced upon heat shock to bind specifically to the heat shock regulatory sequence in vivo, has been purified from shocked cells to more than 95 percent homogeneity by sequence-specific duplex oligonucleotide affinity chromatography. The purified protein has a relative molecular mass of 110 kilodaltons, binds to the regulatory sequence with great affinity and specificity, and strongly stimulates transcription of the Drosophila hsp70 gene. Studies with this regulatory protein should lead to an understanding of the biochemical pathway underlying the heat shock phenomenon.


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