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1.
Previous work in our laboratory indicates that the nuclear matrix protein lamin B is a "prompt" heat shock protein, which increases significantly when human U-1 melanoma and HeLa cells are exposed to 45.5 degrees C for 5-40 min. Using Western blotting, we found that the lamin B content in U-1 and HeLa cells increased to a greater extent during post-heat incubation at 37 degrees C than during the heat dose itself. When HeLa cells were heated at 45.5 degrees C for 30 min, and then incubated at 37 degrees C for up to 7 h, lamin B content was increased significantly (1.69-fold maximum increase at 3 h) compared to unincubated heated cells. Also, thermotolerant HeLa cells showed a greater increase (up to 1.72-fold) in lamin B content during subsequent heating compared to nontolerant cells. The increase in lamin B content in thermotolerant cells, or when heated cells were incubated at 37 degrees C, was also observed in U-1 cells. HeLa cells heated in the presence of glycerol (a heat protector) showed a 1.21-1.72-fold increase in lamin B content compared to cells heated for 10-30 min without glycerol. In contrast, lamin B content decreased 1.23-1.85-fold when cells were heated for 10-30 min in the presence of procaine (a heat sensitizer) compared to cells heated without procaine. These data suggest that lamin B may play an important role in the heat shock response, and that modulation of lamin B content by heat sensitizers or protectors may play a role in regulation of heat sensitivity.  相似文献   

2.
Zhu, W-G., Seno, J. D., Beck, B. D. and Dynlacht, J. R. Translocation of MRE11 from the Nucleus to the Cytoplasm as a Mechanism of Radiosensitization by Heat. Radiat. Res. 156, 95-102 (2001).Hyperthermia sensitizes mammalian cells to ionizing radiation, presumably by inhibiting the repair of radiation-induced double-strand breaks (DSBs). However, the mechanism by which heat inhibits DSB repair is unclear. The nuclear protein MRE11 is a component of a multi-protein complex involved in nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) of radiation-induced DSBs. Using one-dimensional sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting, we found that MRE11 is translocated from the nucleus to the cytoplasm when human U-1 melanoma or HeLa cells are heated for 15 min at 45.5 degrees C or when cells are heated after irradiation with 12 Gy of X rays. No such translocation is observed in unheated irradiated cells. The kinetics of migration of MRE11 to the cytoplasm was dependent upon whether the heated cells were irradiated, while the magnitude of redistribution of MRE11 was dependent upon post-treatment incubation time at 37 degrees C. Cytoplasmic MRE11 content reached a maximum 2-4 h after heating; the increase was not due to new protein synthesis. Partial recovery of nuclear MRE11 content was observed when heated cells or heated irradiated cells were incubated for up to 7 h at 37 degrees C after treatment. Western blotting results showing translocation of MRE11 from the nucleus to the cytoplasm after heating and irradiation were confirmed using confocal microscopy and immunofluorescence staining of fixed cells. Our data suggest that radiosensitization by heat may be caused, at least in part, by translocation of the DNA repair protein MRE11 from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Time-temperature analyses of durations of heating required to achieve isosurvival were used to compare hyperthermic cell killing of synchronous Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells heated in G1 or S at temperatures of 42 to 45.5 degrees C. G1 populations were obtained by incubation of mitotic cells for 90 min at 37 degrees C. S phase populations were obtained by incubation of mitotic cells for 12 h at 37 degrees C in medium supplemented with 2 micrograms/ml aphidicolin, a reversible inhibitor of DNA alpha polymerase; S phase survival was also determined in an aphidicolin-free system by using high specific activity [3H]thymidine. In both systems, the thermosensitivity was similar and decreased as the cells progressed from early S phase, in agreement with earlier studies (R. A. Read, M. H. Fox, and J. S. Bedford. Radiat. Res. 98, 491-505 (1984]. A comparison of Arrhenius plots of the inverse of durations of heating required to achieve isosurvival for cells heated in G1 or S phase showed similar temperature dependence above 43.5 degrees C, yet the plots for heat-sensitive S phase cells were offset from those for heat-resistant G1 cells by about 1.5 degrees C, i.e., S phase cells respond to 43 degrees C with a rate similar to that observed in G1 cells heated at 44.5 degrees C. Using least-squares regression of the semilog plots, the curves were analyzed either as continually bending curves or as two straight lines with a break at 43.5 degrees C. When the data were analyzed using two straight lines, no significant differences in the slopes of the time-temperature plots of G1 or S phase cells were observed. A quantitative comparison between the two methods of data analysis demonstrated that in both phases the data were better fit with a continuously curving line, rather than two straight lines.  相似文献   

5.
Intracellular pH (pHi) was measured in both unheated and heated cells by the distribution of the weak acid, 5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione-2-14C (14C-DMO), and by the fluorescence intensity ratio (I530/I630) of the pH sensitive fluorescent dye, 2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxy-fluorescein (BCECF), analyzed by flow cytometry (FCM). BCECF-loaded Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were analyzed by FCM after they had incubated in fresh medium at 37 degrees C for 90 min, during which time a decrease in fluorescence ratio stabilized. After stabilization, the pHi determined for CHO cells by the FCM method at pHe values of 6.0-8.1 agreed-within 0.1 pH units with that determined by the 14C-DMO method. There is a pH gradient across the plasma membrane that is not affected by heat. In CHO cells, the gradient, determined by DMO and FCM, is less or greater than pHe by 0.30 and 0.15 pH units at pHe 7.4 and 6.3, respectively, and in NG108-15 cells, the gradient determined by DMO increases to 0.50 pH units at pHe 6.3. Both cells maintained their pH gradients for at least 4 h after heating, although 99.9% of the cells were reproductively dead (survival of 10(-3)) after heating at 45.5 degrees C either at the normal pHe of 7.4 or at a low pHe of 6.4-6.7.  相似文献   

6.
The induction of thermotolerance was studied in a temperature sensitive mouse cell line, ts85, and results were compared with those for the wild-type FM3A cells. At the nonpermissive temperature of 39 degrees C, ts85 cells are defective in the degradation of short-lived abnormal proteins, apparently because of loss of activity of a ubiquitin-activating enzyme. The failure of the ts85 cells to develop thermotolerance to 41-43 degrees C after incubation at the nonpermissive temperature of 39 degrees C correlated with the failure of the cells to degrade short-lived abnormal proteins at 39 degrees C. However, the failure of the ts85 cells to develop thermotolerance to 43 degrees C during incubation at 33 degrees C after either arsenite treatment or heating at 45.5 degrees C for 6 or 10 min did not correlate with protein degradation rates. Although the rate of degrading abnormal protein was reduced after heating at 45.5 degrees C for 10 min, the rates were normal after arsenite treatment or heating at 45.5 degrees C for 6 min. In addition, when protein synthesis was inhibited with cycloheximide both during incubation at 33 degrees C or 39 degrees C and during heating at 41-43 degrees C, resistance to heating was observed, but protein degradation rates at 39 degrees C or 43 degrees C were not altered by the cycloheximide treatment. Therefore, there is apparently no consistent relationship between rates of degrading abnormal proteins and the ability of cells to develop thermotolerance and resistance to heating in the presence of cycloheximide.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Cells of Escherichia coli ML308-225, harvested from the exponential phase, were heated in 50 mM potassium phosphate, and the loss in viability and inability to transport lactose, proline, and alpha-methylglucoside was compared. After cells were heated at 48 degrees C for 15 min, there was a 16% loss in viability and a similarly small reduction in the steady-state accumulation of lactose at 25 degrees C. The initial rates of lactose and proline transport were severely inhibited by heating at either 48 or 50 degrees C, but substantial recovery occurred within 5 to 7 min at 25 degrees C. Heating at 50 degrees C for 15 min caused an 86% loss in viability, but only a 53% decrease in the steady-state accumulation of lactose and only a 24% reduction in the initial rate of alpha-methylglucoside uptake. Twice as much alpha-methylglucoside was accumulated at 50 degrees C as at 25 degrees C. Although alpha-methylglucoside phosphate leaked from the cells at 50 degrees C, the concentration retained within the cells was about 500 times that externally, when only about 14% of the cells were viable. Overall, these results indicate that cells made nonviable by heating at 50 degrees C still have significant membrane integrity.  相似文献   

9.
Cells of Escherichia coli ML308-225, harvested from the exponential phase, were heated in 50 mM potassium phosphate, and the loss in viability and inability to transport lactose, proline, and alpha-methylglucoside was compared. After cells were heated at 48 degrees C for 15 min, there was a 16% loss in viability and a similarly small reduction in the steady-state accumulation of lactose at 25 degrees C. The initial rates of lactose and proline transport were severely inhibited by heating at either 48 or 50 degrees C, but substantial recovery occurred within 5 to 7 min at 25 degrees C. Heating at 50 degrees C for 15 min caused an 86% loss in viability, but only a 53% decrease in the steady-state accumulation of lactose and only a 24% reduction in the initial rate of alpha-methylglucoside uptake. Twice as much alpha-methylglucoside was accumulated at 50 degrees C as at 25 degrees C. Although alpha-methylglucoside phosphate leaked from the cells at 50 degrees C, the concentration retained within the cells was about 500 times that externally, when only about 14% of the cells were viable. Overall, these results indicate that cells made nonviable by heating at 50 degrees C still have significant membrane integrity.  相似文献   

10.
DNA fork displacement rates (FDR) were measured in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells heated at either 43.5 degrees C or 45.5 degrees C for various times. The inhibition of fork movement rate by heat was both time and temperature dependent, i.e., 10-20 min at 43.5 degrees C or 5 min at 45.5 degrees C was required to decrease the FDR to 20-30% of the control rate of 1 micron/min. Following heating, the reduced FDR was found to be constant for at least 75 min. The observed effects of heat on reduced rates of DNA replicon initiation and chain elongation and the increase in DNA with single-stranded regions could be explained by the heat sensitivity of the FDR. Any of these alterations in the DNA replication process may lead to many opportunities for abnormal DNA and/or protein interactions to occur which ultimately may lead to the observed formation of chromosomal aberrations.  相似文献   

11.
Batch cultures of Shigella flexneri M4243 were grown at 37 degrees C in broth to early stationary phase, washed, and heated at 50 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0). Cells were surface plated on a tryptic phytone glucose agar (TPGA), TPGA with 0.15 or 0.85% bile salts no. 3 (TPGA-BS 0.15 or TPGA-BS 0.85), or TPGA with 0.25 or 0.50% sodium deoxycholate (TPGA-DC 0.25 or TPGA-DC 0.50). Cells sampled after no heating produced colony counts on TPGA-BS 0.85 or on TPGA-DC 0.50 that were no more than about 0.5 log lower than for unheated cell samples plated on TPGA. Cells heated at 50 degrees C for 30 min produced colony counts on TPGA-DC 0.50 or on TPGA-BS 0.85 that were about 1.5 logs lower than on TPGA. Cells heated for 30 min and shifted to TPG broth at 37 degrees C to allow resuscitation required about 2 h to regain tolerance to 0.85% BS. However, heated cells resuscitated on solid TPGA at 35 degrees C before being challenged with overlays of TPGA-BS 0.85 or TPGA-DC 0.50 required 6 to 8 h on TPGA to regain tolerance to 0.85% BS or 0.50% DC. To regain tolerance to overlays of 0.15% BS or 0.25% DC, heated cells required resuscitation periods on TPGA of about 2 or 2 to 6 h, respectively. Cells heated in TPG broth and sampled after no heating produced colony counts on TPGA that were about 1.5 logs lower than for unheated cell suspensions, suggesting greater apparent injury when heat stressed in broth than in buffer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Batch cultures of Shigella flexneri M4243 were grown at 37 degrees C in broth to early stationary phase, washed, and heated at 50 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0). Cells were surface plated on a tryptic phytone glucose agar (TPGA), TPGA with 0.15 or 0.85% bile salts no. 3 (TPGA-BS 0.15 or TPGA-BS 0.85), or TPGA with 0.25 or 0.50% sodium deoxycholate (TPGA-DC 0.25 or TPGA-DC 0.50). Cells sampled after no heating produced colony counts on TPGA-BS 0.85 or on TPGA-DC 0.50 that were no more than about 0.5 log lower than for unheated cell samples plated on TPGA. Cells heated at 50 degrees C for 30 min produced colony counts on TPGA-DC 0.50 or on TPGA-BS 0.85 that were about 1.5 logs lower than on TPGA. Cells heated for 30 min and shifted to TPG broth at 37 degrees C to allow resuscitation required about 2 h to regain tolerance to 0.85% BS. However, heated cells resuscitated on solid TPGA at 35 degrees C before being challenged with overlays of TPGA-BS 0.85 or TPGA-DC 0.50 required 6 to 8 h on TPGA to regain tolerance to 0.85% BS or 0.50% DC. To regain tolerance to overlays of 0.15% BS or 0.25% DC, heated cells required resuscitation periods on TPGA of about 2 or 2 to 6 h, respectively. Cells heated in TPG broth and sampled after no heating produced colony counts on TPGA that were about 1.5 logs lower than for unheated cell suspensions, suggesting greater apparent injury when heat stressed in broth than in buffer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Changes in the structure of the Escherichia coli nucleoid during heat damage and repair were followed by sedimentation analysis in neutral sucrose gradients. Heating at 50 degrees C results first in a decrease in the sedimentation coefficient of the isolated nucleoid. Increasing the heating time, a subsequent increase in sedimentation coefficient is observed. After a heat shock (i.e. 4 min at 50 degrees C), a short incubation at 25 degrees C (i.e. 5 min) allows the nucleoid to repair and return to the sedimentation coefficient of control unheated nucleoids. The nucleoids heated at 50 degrees C for longer periods and incubated afterwards at 25 degrees C demonstrate a different pattern of structural repair. They associate with protein in the first stage of the repair period.  相似文献   

14.
To determine where in the cell cycle Chinese hamster ovary cells die following heating in G1, a mild hyperthermia treatment, i.e., 10 or 11.5 min at 45.5 degrees C, resulting in 40-50% cell kill was used. After a 7-14-h delay in G1, the cells heated in G1 eventually entered S phase and replicated all their DNA. Both an autoradiographic analysis with tritiated thymidine and a bromodeoxyuridine-propidium iodide bivariate analysis by flow cytometry revealed that both clonogenic and nonclonogenic cells were delayed in progression through S phase for at least 4 h. Then they completed replication of all their DNA and entered G2. Alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis revealed that these heated cells could complete replicon elongation into cluster-sized molecules of 120-160 S which persisted for 2-12 h after heating. However, further replicon elongation into multicluster-sized molecules greater than 160 S required an additional 12 h in heated cells compared to the 4 h needed in unheated control cells. Our results when compared with the literature suggest that when G1 cells are heated to a survival level of about 50%, the nonclonogenic cells recover from a long delay in G1, traverse S at a reduced rate, and then die either in G2 or as multinucleated cells after an aberrant division.  相似文献   

15.
Storage of cultures of Salmonella enteritidis PT4 at either 4 degrees or 8 degrees C before heating significantly increased heat sensitivity. The differences between fresh and stored cultures, which became apparent after 4-7 h, were more pronounced with cultures stored at the lower temperature and in those heated at 60 degrees rather than 55 degrees C. Incubation of the stored cultures in either egg or Lemco broth for 30 min at 37 degrees C prior to heating enabled the organisms to recover heat resistance.  相似文献   

16.
Yeast cells deficient in DNA ligase were also deficient in their capacity to rejoin single-strand scissions in prelabeled nuclear DNA. After high-dose-rate gamma irradiation (10 and 25 krads), cdc9-9 mutant cells failed to rejoin single-strand scissions at the restrictive temperature of 37 degrees C. In contrast, parental (CDC9) cells (incubated with mutant cells both during and after irradiation) exhibited rapid medium-independent DNA rejoining after 10 min of post-irradiation incubation and slower rates of rejoining after longer incubation. Parental cells were also more resistant than mutant cells to killing by gamma irradiation. Approximately 2.5 +/- 0.07 and 5.7 +/- 0.6 single-strand breaks per 10(8) daltons were detected in DNAs from either CDC9 or cdc9-9 cells converted to spheroplasts immediately after 10 and 25 krads of irradiation, respectively. At the permissive temperature of 23 degrees C, the cdc9-9 cells contained 2 to 3 times the number of DNA single-strand breaks as parental cells after 10 min to 4 h of incubation after 10 krads of irradiation, and two- to eightfold more breaks after 10 min to 2.5 h of incubation after 25 krads of irradiation. Rejoining of single-strand scissions was faster in medium. After only 10 min in buffered growth medium and after 10 krads of irradiation, the number of DNA single-strand breaks was reduced to 0.32 +/- 0.3 (at 23 degrees C) or 0.21 +/- 0.05 (at 37 degrees C) per 10(8) daltons in parental cells, but remained at 2.1 +/- 0.06 (at 23 degrees C) or 2.3 +/- 0.07 (at 37 degrees C) per 10(8) daltons in mutant cells. After 10 or 25 krads of irradiation plus 1 h of incubation in medium at 37 degrees C, only DNA from CDC9 cells was rejoined to the size of DNA from unirradiated cells, whereas at 23 degrees C, DNAs in both strains were completely rejoined.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the correlation between the development of acute thermotolerance and the phosphorylation, synthesis, and expression of the HSP28 family in murine L929 cells. Following heating at 43 degrees C for 30 min, thermotolerance developed rapidly in exponential-phase cells and reached its maximum 4-9 h after heat shock. Maximal thermal resistance was maintained for 24 h and then gradually decayed. However, heat-induced phosphorylation of HSP28 was not detected. Furthermore, HSP28 synthesis during incubation at 37 degrees C for 12 h following heat shock was not detected by [3H]-leucine labeling followed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In addition, Northern blots failed to demonstrate expression of the HSP28 gene. Unlike HSP28, the expression of constitutive and inducible HSP70 genes, along with the synthesis of their proteins, was observed during incubation at 37 degrees C after heat shock. These results demonstrate that HSP28 synthesis and its phosphorylation are not required to develop acute thermotolerance in L929 cells.  相似文献   

18.
The hyperthermic inhibition of cellular DNA synthesis, i.e., reduction in replicon initiation and delay in DNA chain elongation, was previously postulated to be involved in the induction of chromosomal aberrations believed to be largely responsible for killing S-phase cells. Utilizing asynchronous Chinese hamster ovary cells heated for 15 min at 45.5 degrees C, an increase in single-stranded regions in replicating DNA (as measured by BND-cellulose chromatography) persisted in heated cells for as long as replicon initiation was affected. Alkaline sucrose gradient analyses of cells pulse-labeled immediately after heating with [3H]thymidine and subsequently chased at 37 degrees C revealed that these S-phase cells can eventually complete elongation of the replicons in operation at the time of heating, but required about six times as long relative to control cells which completed replicon elongation within 4 h. DNA chain elongation into multicluster-sized molecules was prevented for up to 18 h in these heated cells, resulting in a buildup of cluster-sized molecules (approximately 120-160 S) mainly because of the long-term heat damage to the replicon initiation process. Utilizing bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)-propidium iodide bivariate analysis on a flow cytometer to measure cell progression, control cells pulsed with BrdU and chased in unlabeled medium progressed through S and G2M with cell division starting after 2 h of chase time. In contrast, the majority of the heated S-phase cells progressed slowly and remained blocked in S phase for about 18 h before cell division was observed after 24 h postheat. Our findings suggest that possible sites for where the chromosomal aberrations may be occurring in heated S-phase cells are either (1) at the persistent single-stranded DNA regions or (2) at the regions between clusters of replicons, because this long-term heat damage to the DNA replication process might lead to many opportunities for abnormal DNA and/or protein exchanges to occur at these two sites.  相似文献   

19.
Rhesus monkey erythrocytes were subjected to heating at 50 degrees C for 5-15 min, and the heat-induced effects on the membrane structure were ascertained by analysing the membrane phospholipid organization and membrane skeleton dynamics and interactions in the heated cells. Membrane skeleton dynamics and interactions were determined by measuring the Tris-induced dissociation of the Triton-insoluble membrane skeleton (Triton shells), the spectrin-actin extractability at low ionic strength, spectrin self-association and spectrin binding to normal monkey erythrocyte membrane inside-out vesicles (IOVs). The Tris-induced Triton shell dissociation and spectrin-actin extractability were markedly decreased by the erythrocyte heating. Also, the binding of the heated erythrocyte membrane spectrin-actin with the IOVs was much smaller than that observed with the normal erythrocyte spectrin-actin. Further, the spectrin structure was extensively modified in the heated cells, as compared to the normal erythrocytes. Transbilayer phospholipid organization was ascertained by employing bee venom and pancreatic phospholipases A2, fluorescamine, and Merocyanine 540 as the external membrane probes. The amounts of aminophospholipids hydrolysed by phospholipases A2 or labeled by fluorescamine in intact erythrocytes considerably increased after subjecting them to heating at 50 degrees C for 15 min. Also, the fluorescent dye Merocyanine 540 readily stained the 15-min-heated cells but not the fresh erythrocytes. Unlike these findings, the extent of aminophospholipid hydrolysis in 5-min-heated cells by phospholipases A2 depended on the incubation time. While no change in the membrane phospholipid organization could be detected in 10 min, prolonged incubations led to the increased aminophospholipid hydrolysis. Similarly, fluorescamine failed to detect any change in the transbilayer phospholipid distribution soon after the 5 min heating, but it labeled greater amounts of aminophospholipids in the 5-min-heated cells, as compared to normal cells, after incubating them for 4 h at 37 degrees C. These results have been discussed to analyse the role of membrane skeleton in maintaining the erythrocyte membrane phospholipid asymmetry. It has been concluded that both the ATP-dependent aminophospholipid pump and membrane bilayer-skeleton interactions are required to maintain the transbilayer phospholipid asymmetry in native erythrocyte membrane.  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   

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