Heat-shock proteins are of potential interest to cancer researchers, based on research that has shown that animals may respond to cancer "vaccinations." Tumor cells were "attenuated" (or weakened) and injected in small quantities into a rodent, causing the rodent to become immune to future full-fledged tumor-cell injections. While any relevance of animal research to humans has not been established, it is possible that the same may hold true for other species. Many years after this research was done, Pramod Srivastava[?] discovered that the specific part of the cell that was protecting the "immune" mice was the heat-shock proteins.
Scientists have not discovered exactly how heat-shock (or other environmental stressors) activates the heat-shock factor. However, some studies suggest that an increase in damaged or abnormal proteins bring HSPs into action.
Susan Lindquist is currently a leading heat-shock protein researcher. She is investigating, among other things, "how hsps are regulated, and how they function to protect organisms from death and from developmental anomalies induced by heat." - from her faculty page at: http://ben-may.bsd.uchicago.edu/CCB/faculty/lindquist
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