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A Little Stress May Be Good For You
Public release date: 10-Dec-2003

Contact: Megan Fellman
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Northwestern University

A little stress may be good for you
EVANSTON, Ill. -- We've often heard that red wine and dark chocolate in moderation can be good for you. Now it appears
that a little stress may be beneficial, too.

Northwestern University scientists have shown that elevated levels of special protective proteins that respond to
stress in a cell (known as molecular chaperones) promote longevity. Acute stress triggers a cascading reaction inside
cells that results in the repair or elimination of misfolded proteins, prolonging life by preventing or delaying cell
damage.

The findings are published online today (Dec. 10) by Molecular Biology of the Cell, a publication of the American
Society for Cell Biology. The article will appear in print in the journal's February 2004 issue.

"Sustained stress definitely is not good for you, but it appears that an occasional burst of stress or low levels of
stress can be very protective," said Richard I. Morimoto, John Evans Professor of Biology, who co-authored the paper
with lead author James F. Morley, a graduate student in Morimoto's lab. "Brief exposure to environmental and
physiological stress has long-term benefits to the cell because it unleashes a great number of molecular chaperones
that capture all kinds of damaged and misfolded proteins."

Stressors also include elevated temperatures, oxygen stress, bacterial and viral infections, and exposure to toxins
such as heavy metals, all of which challenge the environment of the cell. A master protein called heat shock factor
senses the stress and responds by turning on the genes that encode molecular chaperones.

Proteins are basic components of all living cells. To do its job properly, each protein first must fold itself into the
proper shape. In this process, the protein is assisted by molecular chaperones that function to prevent misfolding, or,
in the case of already misfolded proteins, to detect them and prevent their further accumulation. Mutations or
environmental stress enhances protein damage. If misfolded or damaged proteins accumulate beyond a certain critical
point, neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and Lou Gehrig's diseases can result.

Morimoto and Morley studied C. elegans, a transparent roundworm whose biochemical environment is similar to that of
human beings and whose genome, or complete genetic sequence, is known. In their experiments, the researchers found that
when heat shock factor, the master gene that controls the expression of all chaperones, was underexpressed in adult
animals, longevity was suppressed. When heat shock factor was overexpressed, lifespan increased. The results suggest
that heat shock factor has significant beneficial effects to the organism as a whole.

"The heat shock response is identical in all life on Earth," said Morimoto, who was the first to clone a human heat
shock gene in 1985.

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The research was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the National Institute of
Neurological Disease and Stroke, Huntington's Disease Society of America and the Daniel F. and Ada L. Rice Foundation.

SOURCE: EurekAlert, DC
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-12/nu-als121003.php

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