Heat shock factor 2 (HSF2) belongs to a family of structurally related transcription factors, which share the property of binding to heat shock elements in the promoters of hsp molecular chaperone genes. However, unlike HSF1, which is essential for hsp gene transcription, the cellular functions of HSF2 are not well known. Here we show that human HSF2, although an ineffective activator of the hsp70 promoter in vitro and in vivo in the absence of stress, participates in the activation of the hsp70 promoter by heat shock. HSF2 was not, however, activated by heat shock in cells deficient in functional HSF1, suggesting a requirement for HSF1 in HSF2-mediated transcriptional enhancement. In addition, HSF2 regulation involves differential activity of two isoforms, HSF2A and HSF2B, which arise from alternative splicing of a common hsf2 gene. Under basal conditions, both HSF2 isoforms are ineffective in activating the hsp70 transcription. However, heat shock differentially activates HSF2A in vivo. This phenomenon appears to be physiologically significant, as human myeloprogenitor cells differentiating along the erythroid lineage express HSF2A de novo and undergo a large increase in capacity to activate the hsp70 promoter. Our experiments further show that HSF1 is physically associated with HSF2 in the cell and that such binding is enhanced by heat shock. Our data suggest a mechanism involving the formation of heterocomplexes between HSF1 and HSF2 with enhanced activity to activate the hsp70 promoter when compared with HSF1 or HSF2 homotrimers.The heat shock transcription factor (HSF) 1 family was first discovered in experiments investigating proteins binding to the promoters of hsp genes (1-3). HSF isolated from yeast, Drosophila, murine, and human cells was shown to be involved in binding to the heat shock response elements (HSE) in heat shock promoters and activating transcription (3-9). Since the isolation of hsf from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, related genes have been found in a wide range of species and a hsf multigene family has now been described (10). Members of the hsf family share structural domains and functional properties including a highly conserved N-terminal DNA binding domain and a heptad repeat "leucine zipper" structure adjacent to the DNA binding domain that regulates trimerization and the ability to bind DNA (10 -12). In mammalian and avian cells, there are multiple hsf family members and four distinct hsf genes have been described to date (6, 7, 13-15). These include heat shock factor 1 (hsf1) with a crucial role in the stress response and other, structurally related genes (hsf2, hsf3, and hsf4) (10, 14 -19).The cellular functions of the hsf2 product still remain largely unknown. Some studies show that HSF2 increases in concentration and becomes activated to a DNA binding form in differentiating K-562 myeloprogenitor cells and that this increase correlates with an increase in transcription of HSP70 (18,19). Although these studies suggest that increases in HSF2 expression may be involved in the activat...