首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We have shown that heat shock does not induce the synthesis of hsp70 in FM3A cells maintained at a low culture temperature of 33 degrees C although it does so in cells maintained at 37 degrees C [T. Hatayama et al. (1991) Biochem. Int. 24, 467-474]. In this paper, we show that FM3A cells maintained at 37 degrees C produced hsp70 mRNA during continuous heating at 42 degrees C or during postincubation at either 37 or 33 degrees C after being heated at 45 degrees C for 15 min, whereas cells maintained at 33 degrees C did not produce hsp70 mRNA during continuous heating at 37, 39, 42, or 45 degrees C, or during postincubation after being heated at any temperature. Thus the lack of hsp70 synthesis in cells maintained at 33 degrees C seemed to be due to the absence of hsp70 mRNA induction. Also, hsp70 was accumulated in cells maintained at 37 degrees C during continuous heating at 42 degrees C and during postincubation at 37 degrees C after heat shock at 45 degrees C, but not during postincubation at 33 degrees C. The cellular level of the constitutive hsp73 as well as the mRNA level were both similar in cells maintained at 33 and 37 degrees C. On the other hand, the cellular level of the constitutive hsp105 in cells maintained at 33 degrees C was only half of that in cells maintained at 37 degrees C. These hsp105 levels increased significantly in both types of cells after continuous heating at 39 degrees C. These findings indicate that the culture temperature affects not only the induction of hsp70 mRNA but also the accumulation of hsp70 and hsp105 in the cells.  相似文献   

2.
In this study we have investigated the acquisition of thermotolerance in a Xenopus laevis kidney A6 epithelial cell line at both the level of cell survival and translation. In cell survival studies, A6 cells were incubated at temperatures ranging from 22 to 35 degrees degrees C for 2 h followed by a thermal challenge at 39 degrees degrees C for 2 h and a recovery period at 22 degrees C for 24 h. Optimal acquisition of thermotolerance occurred at 33 degrees degrees C. For example, exposure of A6 cells to 39 degrees degrees C for 2 h resulted in only 3.4% survival of the cells whereas prior exposure to 33 degrees C for 2 h enhanced the survival rate to 69%. This state of thermotolerance in A6 cells was detectable after 1 h at 33 degrees C and was maintained even after 18 h of incubation. Cycloheximide inhibited the acquisition of thermotolerance at 33 degrees C suggesting the requirement for ongoing protein synthesis. The optimal temperature for the acquisition of translational thermotolerance also occurred at 33 degrees C. Treatment of A6 cells at 39 degrees C for 2 h resulted in an inhibition of labeled amino acid incorporation into protein which recovered to approximately 14% of control after 19 h at 22 degrees C whereas cells treated at 33 degrees C for 2 h prior to the thermal challenge recovered to 58% of control levels. These translationally thermotolerant cells displayed relatively high levels of the heat shock proteins hsp30, hsp70, and hsp90 compared to pretreatment at 22, 28, 30, or 35 degrees C. These studies demonstrate that Xenopus A6 cells can acquire a state of thermotolerance and that it is correlated with the synthesis of heat shock proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The objectives of this study were to determine the ability of trophectoderm from preimplantation ovine embryos to synthesize hsp70 in response to heat shock and to identify conditions which induce translational thermotolerance in this tissue. Day 15 embryos were collected, and proteins synthesized in 1.5-mm sections of trophectoderm were radioactively labeled with (35)S-methionine. One-dimensional SDS-PAGE gels, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and Western blots were utilized to characterize the heat shock response and to examine the induction of translational thermotolerance. Increased synthesis of the 70 kDa heat shock proteins and a protein with an approximate molecular weight of 15 to 20 kDa was observed with heat shock (> or = 42 degrees C). Total protein synthesis decreased (P < 0.05) with increased intensity of heat shock. At 45 degrees C, protein synthesis was suppressed with little or no synthesis of all proteins including hsp70. Recovery of protein synthesis following a severe heat shock (45 degrees C for 20 min) occurred faster (P < 0.05) in trophectoderm pretreated with a mild heat shock (42 degrees C for 30 min) than trophectoderm not pretreated with mild heat. In summary, trophoblastic tissue obtained from ovine embryos exhibit the characteristic "heatshock" response similar to that described for other mammalian systems. In addition, a sublethal heat shock induced the ability of the tissue to resume protein synthesis following severe heat stress. Since maintaining protein synthesis is crucial to embryonic survival, manipulation of the heat-shock response may provide a method to enhance embryonic survival.  相似文献   

4.
A slow temperature transient from 37 to 42 degrees C over 3 hr instead of the usual rapid 4- to 7-min transient increases thermal resistance twofold in MTC tumor cells and yet reduces the rates of synthesis of the 70- and 22-kDa heat-stress proteins (hsp) immediately prior to and during expression of thermal resistance--2 to 8 hr after reaching 42 degrees C [S. P. Tomasovic, P. A. Steck, and D. Heitzman, Radiat. Res. 95, 399-413 (1983)]. However, examination of hsp synthesis at earlier times reaching 42 degrees C (0.5 to 2 hr) has revealed differential expression of the individual hsp that is dependent on the rate of heating. Within 30 min of reaching 42 degrees C, cells exposed to slow transients had higher rates of synthesis of the 112- and 90- but not the 70-kDa hsp. However, cells exposed to rapid transients had a higher rate of synthesis of the 70-kDa hsp by 1 hr after reaching 42 degrees C. The rate of synthesis of the 22-kDa hsp was similar in cells heated by either method. Rates of synthesis of the 112-, 90-, and 22-kDa hsp in cells exposed to rapid transients did not equal or surpass the rates for cells exposed to slow transients until between 2 and 3 hr of heating, just before expression of thermal resistance. Rate of heating also had differential effects on total protein synthesized and transport. The total protein synthesized was observed to be 40% higher in slow-transient-treated cells over the first 2 hr. Transport of an amino acid analog, aminoisobutyric acid, was significantly inhibited in rapid-transient cells immediately after reaching 42 degrees C and had not recovered 1 or 5 hr later. Similar to total protein synthesis transport in slow-transient-treated cells was unaffected. There was no significant difference between slow- and rapid-transient-treated cells in hsp degradation, cell-cycle distribution, or amino acid pool sizes in the first 4 to 6 hr after reaching 42 degrees C. These results suggest that although the ultimate thermal dose was about 10-fold higher under slow-transient conditions, the cells receiving this treatment made regulatory or metabolic adjustments, including altered hsp synthesis patterns, that reduced initial heat damage. Either the protection of total protein synthesis or that combined with higher initial rates of synthesis of some hsp could explain the previously reported increased initial D0, increased thermotolerance, and reductions in latter hsp synthesis rates seen following slow temperature transients.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of low culture temperature on the induction of heat shock proteins in FM3A cells by a heat shock and on the thermal sensitivity of the cells were examined. FM3A cells maintained at 33 degrees C could not induce hsp70 during continuous heating or after a short heat shock at either 39, 42, or 45 degrees C, although FM3A cells maintained at a normal culture temperature of 37 degrees C can induce the synthesis of hsp70. Furthermore, the cells maintained at 33 degrees C were more sensitive to the subsequent heat shock than the cells maintained at 37 degrees C. Thus, the culture temperature of the mammalian cells may be an important factor for the induction of hsp70, and hsp70 may play an important role to protect or repair the thermal damage of cells.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies suggested that a 26 kDa protein might play an important role in protein synthesis-independent thermotolerance development in CHO cells. To determine if this phenomenon was universal, four mammalian cell lines, viz., CHO, HA-1, murine Swiss 3T3, and human HeLa, were studied. Cells were heated at 42 degrees C, and the level of 26 kDa protein in the nucleus was measured, together with clonogenic survival and protein synthesis. The results demonstrated that 1) the 26-kDa protein was present in the four different cell lines, and 2) the level of the 26 kDa protein in their nuclei was decreased by 30-70% after heating at 42 degrees C for 1 hr. However, restoration of this protein occurred along with development of chronic thermotolerance. The protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (10 micrograms/ml) neither inhibited the development of chronic thermotolerance nor affected the restoration of the 26 kDa protein in the nucleus. In fact, this drug protected cells from hyperthermic killing and heat-induced reduction of 26 kDa protein in the nucleus. Heat sensitizers, quercetin (0.1 mM), 3,3'-dipentyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiOC5[3]: 5 micrograms/ml), and stepdown heating (45 degrees C-10 min----42 degrees C), potentiated hyperthermic killing and inhibited or delayed the restoration of the 26 kDa protein to the nucleus. These results support a correlated, perhaps causal relationship between the restoration of the 26 kDa protein and chronic thermotolerance development in four different mammalian cell lines.  相似文献   

7.
R Cavicchioli  K Watson 《FEBS letters》1986,207(1):149-152
Yeast cells when subjected to a primary heat shock, defined as a temperature shift from 23 to 37 degrees C for 30 min, acquired tolerance to heat stress (52 degrees C/5 min). Primary heat shocked cells incubated at 23 degrees C for up to 3 h, progressively lost thermotolerance but retained high levels of the major heat-shock proteins as observed on polyacrylamide gels. On the other hand, a temperature shift back up to 37 degrees C for 30 min fully restored thermotolerance. The major high-molecular-mass heat-shock proteins (hsp) identified were of approximate molecular mass 100 kDa (hsp 100), 80 kDa (hsp 80) and 70 kDa (hsp 70). The results indicate that loss of heat-shock acquisition of thermotolerance is not correlated with loss of heat-shock proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Postimplantation stage rat embryos (6-10 somites) undergo abnormal development after exposure to a temperature of 43 degrees C for 30 min. A heat shock of 43 degrees C for 30 min also induces the synthesis of a set of eight heat shock proteins (hsps) with molecular masses ranging from 28,000 to 82,000 Da. The synthesis of these hsps is rapidly induced after the heat shock is applied and rapidly decays after embryos are returned to 37 degrees C. A heat shock of 42 degrees C for 30 min has no effect on rat embryo growth and development, but does induce the synthesis of three hsps. The most prominent of these three is believed to be the typical mammalian 70 kDa hsp. Furthermore, a 42 degrees C, 30-min heat shock followed by a 43 degrees C 30-min heat shock leads to partial protection from the embryotoxic effects of a single exposure at 43 degrees C, i.e., thermotolerance.  相似文献   

9.
Studies were initiated to determine the extent to which reduced glutathione (GSH) may be involved in the capacity of cultured rat embryos to develop heat-induced tolerance to the deleterious effects of exposure to high temperatures (heat shock). Investigations of the modulation of dysmorphogenic responses of embryos to heat shock (43 degrees C, 30 min) as well as to the expression of the hsp70 gene and subsequent formation of hsps indicated that the acquisition of thermotolerance by rat embryos could be significantly influenced by the inhibition of GSH synthesis. Treatment of conceptuses with L-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO) reduced intracellular GSH concentrations and compromised the capacity of embryos to mount a thermotolerance response as assessed by alterations in indices of growth and development. Embryonic thermotolerance elicited by preexposure to 42 degrees C for 30 min was accompanied by increases in GSH to levels greater than those measured in control embryos at 37 degrees C just prior to the subsequent 43 degrees C heat exposure. Expression of hsp70 mRNA was detectable soon after elevation of the temperature to 42 degrees C and reached its highest level of accumulation 1.5 hr after the 43 degrees C heat shock. BSO treatment had little if any effect on hsp70 message levels or on the synthesis of hsp70. The fact that BSO-treatment attenuated the thermotolerance response but did not produce a decrease in hsp70 RNA or the synthesis of hsp70 suggests that hsp70 alone is not sufficient to confer thermotolerance upon cultured rat embryos.  相似文献   

10.
Dynamic intracellular ATP and Pi levels were measured non-invasively for Chinese hamster V79 cells by 31P-NMR under conditions of thermotolerance and heat-shock protein induction. High densities of cells were embedded in agarose strands, placed within a standard NMR sample tube, and perfused with medium maintained either at 37 or 43 degrees C at pH 7.35. Cell survival and heat-shock protein synthesis were assessed either from parallel monolayer cultures or cells dislodged from the agarose strands post-treatment. Thermotolerance (heat resistance) and heat-shock protein synthesis was induced by a 1 h exposure to 43 degrees C followed by incubation for 5 h at 37 degrees C. After the 5 h incubation at 37 degrees C, marked thermal resistance was observed in regard to survival with concomitant synthesis of two major heat-shock proteins at 70 and 103 kDa. Studies were also conducted where tolerance and heat-shock protein synthesis were partially inhibited by depletion of cellular glutathione (GSH) prior to and during heat treatment. Dynamic measurement of intracellular ATP of cells heated with or without GSH depletion revealed no change in steady-state levels immediately after heating or during the 5 h post-heating incubation at 37 degrees C where thermotolerance and heat-shock proteins develop. These data are consistent with other reported data for mammalian cells and indicate that the steady-state ATP levels in mammalian cells remain unchanged during and after the acquisition of the thermotolerant state.  相似文献   

11.
In CHO and R1H cells thermotolerance was induced by a pre-incubation at 40 degrees C, by an acute heat shock at 43 degrees C followed by a time interval at 37 degrees C, and during continuous heating at 42 degrees C. Thermotolerance, which was tested at 43 degrees C, primarily causes an increase in D0 of the heat-response curve. The degree of maximum thermotolerance was found to be generally more pronounced in CHO than in R1H cells, but the time interval at 37 degrees C, as well as at 40 degrees C, to reach this maximum level was the same in both cell lines. CHO and R1H cells could be sensitized to 40 degrees C by a pre-treatment at 43 degrees C. When compared for the same survival rate after pre-treatment at 43 degrees C alone the degree of thermosensitization was about the same in both cell lines. In either cell line thermosensitization was found to be suppressed when cells were made thermotolerant by a previous incubation at 40 degrees C for 16 hours.  相似文献   

12.
G C Li  G M Hahn 《Radiation research》1987,112(3):517-524
The development of thermotolerance and its decay in plateau-phase Chinese hamster cells are shown to be temperature-dependent phenomena. Development of tolerance, after an initial dose of 10 min at 45 degrees C, is appreciably slower between 20 and 28 degrees C than it is at 37 degrees C. Decay of tolerance is also slower in that temperature range; at 4-23 degrees C, it does not decay at all during the 96-h interval of the experiment. At 41 degrees C, thermotolerance decay, "step-down" cell killing, and thermotolerance induction apparently all occur and affect cell survival. The decay of HSP 70 mirrors that of thermotolerance, except at 41 degrees C. At that temperature very likely de novo synthesis of that protein becomes important in determining protein concentration. Our data show that care must be taken when extrapolating from kinetic data obtained with surface tissues in vivo to those in depth. The former are usually at a temperature between 25 and 32 degrees C; the latter are at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

13.
We have compared the effects of a mild heat shock and febrile temperatures on heat-shock protein (hsp) synthesis and development of stress tolerance in T lymphocytes. Our previous studies demonstrated that febrile temperatures (less than or equal to 41 degrees C) induced the synthesis of hsp110, hsp90, and the constitutive or cognate form of hsp70 (hscp70; a weak induction of the strongly stress-induced hsp70 was also observed. In the studies reported herein, we demonstrate that a mild heat shock (42.5 degrees C) reverses this ratio; that is, hsp70 and not hscp70 is the predominate member of this family synthesized at this temperature. Modest heat shock also enhanced the synthesis of hsp110 and hsp90. In order to assess the relationship between hsp synthesis and the acquisition of thermotolerance, purified T cells were first incubated at 42.5 degrees C (induction temperature) and then subsequently subjected to a severe heat-shock challenge (45 degrees C, 30 min). T cells first incubated at a mild heat-shock temperature were capable of total protein synthesis at a more rapid rate following a severe heat shock than control cells (induction temperature 37 degrees C). This phenomenon, which has been previously termed translational tolerance, did not develop in cells incubated at the febrile temperature (induction temperature 41 degrees C). Protection of translation also extended to immunologically relevant proteins such as interleukin-2 and the interleukin-2 receptor. Because clonal expansion is a critical event during an immune response, the effects of hyperthermic stress on DNA replication (mitogen-induced T cell proliferation) was also evaluated in thermotolerant T cells. DNA synthesis in control cells (induction temperature 37 degrees C) was severely inhibited following heat-shock challenge at 44 degrees C or 45 degrees C; in contrast, T cells preincubated at 42.5 degrees C rapidly recovered their DNA synthetic capacity. T cells preincubated at a febrile temperature were moderately protected against hyperthermic stress. The acquisition of thermotolerance was also associated with enhanced resistance to chemical (ethanol)-induced stress but not to heavy metal toxicity (cadmium) or dexamethasone-induced immunosuppression. These studies suggest that prior hsp synthesis may protect immune function against some forms of stress (e.g., febrile episode) but would be ineffective against others such as elevated glucocorticoid levels which normally occur during an immune response.  相似文献   

14.
The time course and magnitude of the heat-shock response in relation to severity of thermal stress are important, yet poorly understood, aspects of thermotolerance. We examined patterns of protein synthesis in congeneric marine snails (genus Tegula) that occur at different heights along the subtidal to intertidal gradient after a thermal exposure (30 degrees C for 2.5 h, followed by 50 h recovery at 13 degrees C) that induced the heat-shock response. We monitored the kinetics and magnitudes of protein synthesis by quantifying incorporation of 35S-labeled methionine and cysteine into newly synthesized proteins and observed synthesis of putative heat-shock proteins (hsp's) of size classes 90, 77, 70, and 38 kDa. In the low- to mid-intertidal species, Tegula funebralis, whose body temperature frequently exceeds 30 degrees C during emersion, synthesis of hsp's commenced immediately after heat stress, reached maximal levels 1-3 h into recovery, and returned to prestress levels by 6 h, except for hsp90 (14 h). In contrast, in the low-intertidal to subtidal species, Tegula brunnea, for which 2.5 h at 30 degrees C represents a near lethal heat stress, synthesis of hsp's commenced 2-14 h after heat stress; reached maximal levels after 15-30 h, which exceeded magnitudes of synthesis in T. funebralis; and returned to prestress levels in the case of hsp90 (50 h) and hsp77 (30 h) but not in the case of hsp70 and hsp38. Exposures to 30 degrees C under aerial (emersion) and aquatic (immersion) conditions resulted in differences in hsp synthesis in T. brunnea but not in T. funebralis. The different time courses and magnitudes of hsp synthesis in these congeners suggest that the vertical limits of their distributions may be set in part by thermal stress.  相似文献   

15.
When CHO cells were treated either for 10 min at 45-45.5 degrees C or for 1 hr with 100 microM sodium arsenite (ARS) or for 2 hr with 20 micrograms/ml puromycin (PUR-20), they became thermotolerant to a heat treatment at 45-45.5 degrees C administered 4-14 hr later, with thermotolerance ratios at 10(-3) isosurvival of 4-6, 2-3.2, and 1.7, respectively. These treatments caused an increase in synthesis of HSP families (70, 87, and 110 kDa) relative to total protein synthesis. However, for a given amount of thermotolerance, the ARS and PUR-20 treatments induced 4 times more synthesis than the heat treatment. This decreased effectiveness of the ARS treatment may occur because ARS has been reported to stimulate minimal redistribution of HSP-70 to the nucleus and nucleolus. Inhibiting protein synthesis with cycloheximide (CHM, 10 micrograms/ml) or PUR (100 micrograms/ml) after the initial treatments greatly inhibited thermotolerance to 45-45.5 degrees C in all cases. However, for a challenge at 43 degrees C, thermotolerance was inhibited only for the ARS and PUR-20 treatments. CHM did not suppress heat-induced thermotolerance to 43 degrees C, which was the same as heat protection observed when CHM was added before and during heating at 43 degrees C without the initial heat treatment. These differences between the initial treatments and between 43 and 45 degrees C may possibly be explained by reports that show that heat causes more redistribution of HSP-70 to the nucleus and nucleolus than ARS and that redistribution of HSP-70 can occur during heating at 42 degrees C with or without the presence of CHM. Heating cells at 43 degrees C for 5 hr after thermotolerance had developed induced additional thermotolerance, as measured with a challenge at 45 degrees C immediately after heating at 43 degrees C. Compared to the nonthermotolerant cells, thermotolerance ratios were 10 for the ARS treatment and 8.5 for the initial heat treatment. Adding CHM (10 micrograms/ml) or PUR (100 micrograms/ml) to inhibit protein synthesis during heating at 43 degrees C did not greatly reduce this additional thermotolerance. If, however, protein synthesis was inhibited between the initial heat treatment and heating at 43 degrees C, protein synthesis was required during 43 degrees C for the development of additional thermotolerance to 45 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The temperature-sensitive (ts) Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell mutant tsH1 contains a thermolabile leucyl-tRNA synthetase. Upon incubation at the nonpermissive temperature of 39.5 degrees C, the enzyme became reversibly inhibited over a period of minutes, and the cells lost viability over a period of many hours. However, killing of tsH1 by acute heating at 45 degrees C was identical to that of wild-type (SC) cells. In addition, the heat-induced inhibition of protein synthesis was similar for both cell types, as measured after acute heating at 45 degrees C. Furthermore, both killing and inhibition of protein synthesis showed thermotolerance in both cell types. In contrast to the effects at 45 degrees C, at 39.5 degrees C, neither the inhibition of leucyl-tRNA synthetase activity nor the killing of tsH1 expressed thermotolerance. Also, treatment of tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C did not induce thermotolerance to killing at 45 degrees C. The inhibition of leucyl-tRNA synthetase activity in tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C was further distinguished from the 45 degrees C-induced inhibition of protein synthesis in SC cells by a much more rapid reversal of the inhibition of leucyl-tRNA synthetase activity. Also, the rate of reversal of the inhibition of protein synthesis by 45 degrees C in SC cells was decreased by increased heat dose. Such was not true for the 39.5 degrees C inhibition of leucyl-tRNA synthetase activity in tsH1. The data indicate that there exist two distinct types of thermal inhibition--one slowly reversible type which was observed during and after heating at 45 degrees C and both induced and expressed thermotolerance, and a second, rapidly reversible type, which was evident only during heating of tsH1 at 39.5 degrees C and neither induced nor expressed thermotolerance.  相似文献   

17.
Aedes albopictus (clone C6/36) cells, which normally grow at 28 degrees C, were maintained at a supraoptimal temperature of 37 degrees C. The effect of continuous heat stress (37 degrees C) on cell growth was analyzed as were the modifications occurring with protein synthesis during short- and long-term heat stress. We observed that cells in lag or exponential growth phase, present inhibition of cell growth, and cells in the lag phase showed more sensitivity to death than cells growing exponentially. During the first hour of exposing the cells to 37 degrees C, they synthesized two heat shock proteins (hsps) of 82 kd and 70 kd, respectively, concomitant with inhibition of normally produced proteins at control temperature (28 degrees C). However, for incubations longer than 2 hr at 37 degrees C, a shift to the normal pattern of protein synthesis occurred. During these transitions, two other hsps of 76 kd and 90 kd were synthesized. Pulse chase experiments showed that the 70-kd hsp is stable at least for 18 hr, when the cells are returned to 28 degrees C. However, if cells were incubated at 37 degrees C, the 70-kd hsp is stable for at least 48 hr. The 70-kd hsp was localized in the cytoplasmic and in the nuclear compartment. Our results indicate a possible role of hsp 70-kd protein in the regulation of cell proliferation.  相似文献   

18.
Exposure of cells to heat induces thermotolerance, a transient resistance to subsequent heat challenges. It has been shown that thermotolerance is correlated in time with the enhanced synthesis of heat shock proteins. In this study, the association of induced heat shock proteins with various cellular fractions was investigated and the heat-induced changes in skeletal protein composition in thermotolerant and control cells was compared. All three major heat shock proteins induced in Chinese hamster fibroblasts after a 46 degrees C, 4-min heat treatment (70, 87, and 110 kDa) were purified with the cytoplasmic fraction, whereas only the 70-kDa protein was also found in other cell fractions, including that containing the cellular skeleton. Immediately after a second heat treatment at 45 degrees C for 45 min, the 110-kDa protein from thermotolerant cells also purified extensively with the cellular skeletal fraction. In this regard, the 110-kDa protein behaved similarly to many other cellular proteins, since we observed an overall temperature-dependent increase in the total labeled protein content of the high-salt-resistant cellular skeletal fraction after heat shock. Pulse-chase studies demonstrated that this increased protein content gradually returned to normal levels after a 3-hr incubation at 37 degrees C. The alteration or recovery kinetics of the total labeled protein content of the cellular skeletal fraction after heat shock did not correlate with the dramatic increase in survival observed in thermotolerant cells. The relationship between heat shock proteins and thermotolerance, therefore, does not correlate directly with changes in the heat-induced cellular alterations leading to differences in protein fractionation.  相似文献   

19.
Rat embryonic fibroblasts growing exponentially at either 35, 37, or 39 degrees C were exposed to 42 degrees C for times up to 6 hr. Cell survival was unaffected by this heat shock in cultures growing at 39 degrees C but survival was decreased in a temperature dependent manner in cells growing at 37 or 35 degrees C. Exposure to 42 degrees C of cells previously adapted to 35 or 37 degrees C resulted in the induction of heat shock proteins (hsps) with apparent molecular weights of 68,000 (hsp 68), 70,000 (hsp 70), and 89,000 (hsp 89); cells previously adapted to 39 degrees C expressed all hsps except hsp 68. Inasmuch as the synthesis of certain hsps may function to protect cells from thermal damage, these data indicate that hsp 68 may not be required for this adaptation-related thermotolerant survival response. Hsp 68 may only be expressed in cells destined to die.  相似文献   

20.
After sodium arsenite (100 microM) treatment, the synthesis of three major heat shock protein families (HSPs; Mr = 110,000, 87,000, and 70,000), as studied with one-dimensional gels, was enhanced twofold relative to that of unheated cells. The increase of unique HSPs, if studied with two-dimensional gels, would probably be much greater. In parallel, thermotolerance was observed as a 100,000-fold increase in survival from 10(-6) to 10(-1) after 4 hr at 43 degrees C, and as a thermotolerance ratio (TTR) of 2-3 at 10(-3) isosurvival for heating at 45.5 degrees C. Cycloheximide (CHM: 10 micrograms/ml) or puromycin (PUR: 100 micrograms/ml), which inhibited total protein synthesis and HSP synthesis by 95%, completely suppressed the development of thermotolerance when either drug was added after sodium arsenite treatment and removed prior to the subsequent heat treatment. Therefore, thermotolerance induced by arsenite treatment correlated with an increase in newly synthesized HSPs. However, with or without arsenite treatment, CHM or PUR added 2-6 hr before heating and left on during heating caused a 10,000-100,000-fold enhancement of survival when cells were heated at 43 degrees C for 4 hr, even though very little synthesis of heat shock proteins occurred. Moreover, these cells manifesting resistance to heating at 43 degrees C after CHM treatment were much different than those manifesting resistance to 43 degrees C after arsenite treatment. Arsenite-treated cells showed a great deal of thermotolerance (TTR of about 10) when they were heated at 45 degrees C after 5 hr of heating at 43 degrees C, compared with less thermotolerance (TTR of about 2) for the CHM-treated cells heated at 45 degrees C after 5 hr of heating at 43 degrees C. Therefore, there are two different phenomena. The first is thermotolerance after arsenite treatment (observed at 43 degrees C or 45.5 degrees C) that apparently requires synthesis of HSPs. The second is resistance to heat after CHM or PUR treatment before and during heating (observed at 43 degrees C with little resistance at 45.5 degrees C) that apparently does not require synthesis of HSPs. This phenomenon not requiring the synthesis of HSPs also was observed by the large increase in thermotolerance to 45 degrees C caused by heating at 43 degrees C, with or without CHM, after cells were incubated for 6 hr following arsenite pretreatment. For both phenomena, a model based on synthesis and redistribution of HSPs is presented.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号