Eva HenrikssonÅbo Akademi University · Cell Biology
Eva Henriksson
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15
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Publications (15)
Heat shock factor 2 (HSF2) is a versatile transcription factor that regulates gene expression under stress conditions, during development, and in disease. Despite recent advances in characterizing HSF2‐dependent target genes, little is known about the protein networks associated with this transcription factor. In this study, we performed co‐immunop...
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are important mediators of intercellular communication involved in local and long‐range signalling of cancer metastasis. The onset of invasion is the key step of the metastatic cascade, but the secretion of EVs has remained unexplored at that stage due to technical challenges. In this study, we present a platform to tra...
Talin 1 (TLN1) is best known for its role at focal adhesions, where it activates β-integrin receptors and transmits mechanical stimuli to the actin cytoskeleton. Interestingly, the localization of TLN1 is not restricted to the focal adhesions, but its function in other cellular compartments remains poorly understood. By utilizing both biochemical a...
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) loaded with biomolecules are important in intercellular communication and mediate local and long-range signals in cancer metastasis. However, it is currently unknown how the development of the primary tumor and onset of invasion affect the secretion and characteristics of EVs. In this study, we developed an EV productio...
Maintenance of protein homeostasis, through inducible expression of molecular chaperones, is essential for cell survival under protein-damaging conditions. The expression and DNA-binding activity of heat shock factor 2 (HSF2), a member of the heat shock transcription factor family, increase upon exposure to prolonged proteotoxicity. Nevertheless, t...
Cellular ability to maintain proper protein homeostasis (proteostasis) is essential for survival upon protein-damaging conditions. Heat shock transcription factor 2 (HSF2) is one of the human HSFs activated in response to proteotoxic stress. HSF2 is dispensable for cell survival during acute heat stress, but its amount and DNA-binding activity incr...
Heat shock factor 1 (HSF1) is an important transcription factor in cellular stress responses, cancer, aging, and developmental
processes including gametogenesis. Disruption of Hsf1, together with another HSF family member, Hsf2, causes male sterility and complete lack of mature sperm in mice, but the specific role of HSF1 in spermatogenesis has rem...
The mammalian Y chromosome is essential for spermatogenesis, which is characterized by sperm cell differentiation and chromatin condensation for acquisition of correct shape of the sperm. Deletions of the male-specific region of the mouse Y chromosome long arm (MSYq), harboring multiple copies of a few genes, lead to sperm head defects and impaired...
Members of the homeodomain leucine zipper (HDZip) family of transcription factors are present in a wide range of plants, from mosses to higher plants, but not in other eukaryotes. The HDZip genes act in developmental processes, including vascular tissue and trichome development, and several of them have been suggested to be involved in the mediatio...
In plants changes in cytosolic calcium ion concentrations ([Ca2+]cyt) have been detected after various stress treatments, including salt treatment. The involvement of a Ca2+ signal as an essential component of signalling pathways leading to downstream responses, such as gene expression, is supported only by a few studies. In this study the possible...
This report describes the characterisation of ATHB16, a novel Arabidopsis thaliana homeobox gene, which encodes a homeodomain-leucine zipper class I (HDZip I) protein. We demonstrate that ATHB16 functions as a growth regulator, potentially as a component in the light-sensing mechanism of the plant. Endogenous ATHB16 mRNA was detected in all organs...
Members of the homeodomain leucine zipper (HDZip) family of transcription factors are present in a wide range of plants, from mosses to higher plants, but not in other eukaryotes. The HDZip genes act in developmental processes, including vascular tissue and trichome development, and several of them have been suggested to be involved in the mediatio...