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1.
A basic ribosomal phosphoprotein of 30,000 molecular weight was rapidly dephosphorylated in cultured Drosophila melanogaster cells heat shocked at 37 degrees C. The protein was associated with the 40S ribosomal subunit and had an electrophoretic mobility similar to that of purified rat liver protein S6 on basic two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels as well as a similar partial proteolysis peptide map. In logarithmically growing cultures, this D. melanogaster S6 protein appeared to have a single phosphorylated species consisting of 30 to 40% of the total cellular S6. Thus, the nearly complete dephosphorylation of this protein observed in heat shock involves a large fraction of the cellular S6. The significance of this dephosphorylation in the expression of the heat shock response was investigated by examining the phosphorylation status of S6 in recovery from heat shock and in response to chemical inducers of the heat shock response. During recovery from a 30-min heat shock, the recovery of normal protein synthesis was almost complete in 2 to 4 hr, whereas there was no significant rephosphorylation of S6 for 8 h. Two chemical inducers of the heat shock response, canavanine and sodium arsenite, induced the synthesis of heat shock proteins in D. melanogaster cells. Sodium arsenite also caused an inhibition of normal protein synthesis similar to that observed in heat shock. Neither agent, however, caused significant dephosphorylation of S6. These results suggest that the dephosphorylation of S6, although invariably observed in heat-shocked cells, may in some cases be dissociated from both the induction of heat shock protein synthesis and the turnoff of normal protein synthesis which occur in a heat shock response.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Continuous exposure of a Xenopus laevis kidney epithelial cell line, A6, to either heat shock (33 degrees C) or sodium arsenite (50 microM) resulted in transient but markedly different temporal patterns of heat-shock protein (HSP) synthesis and HSP 70 and 30 mRNA accumulation. Heat-shock-induced synthesis of HSPs was detectable within 1 h and reached maximum levels by 2-3 h. While sodium arsenite induced the synthesis of some HSPs within 1 h, maximal HSP synthesis did not occur until 12 h. The pattern of HSP 70 and 30 mRNA accumulation was similar to the response observed at the protein level. During recovery from heat shock, a coordinate decline in HSPs and HSP 70 and 30 mRNA was observed. During recovery from sodium arsenite, a similar phenomenon occurred during the initial stages. However, after 6 h of recovery, HSP 70 mRNA levels persisted in contrast to the declining HSP 30 mRNA levels. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of 5 HSPs in the HSP 70 family, of which two were constitutive, and 16 different stress-inducible proteins in the HSP 30 family. In conclusion, heat shock and sodium arsenite induce a similar set of HSPs but maximum synthesis of the HSP is temporally separated by 12-24 h.  相似文献   

4.
Heat shock protein (HSP) synthesis was studied in the Xenopus epithelial cell line A6 in response to heat and sodium arsenite, either singly or together. Temperatures of 33-35 degrees C consistently brought about the synthesis of HSPs at 87, 73, 70, 54, 31, and 30 kilodaltons (kDa), whereas sodium arsenite at 25-100 microM induced the synthesis of HSPs at 73 and 70 kDa. In cultures exposed to 10 microM sodium arsenite at 30 degrees C, HSP synthesis in the 68- to 73-kDa and 29- to 31-kDa regions was much greater than the HSP synthesis in response to each treatment individually. RNA dot blot analysis using homologous genomic subclones revealed that heat shock induced the accumulation of HSP 70 and 30 mRNAs. The sizes of the HSP 70 and 30 mRNAs determined by Northern hybridization were 2.7 and 1.5 kilobases, respectively. Sodium arsenite (10-100 microM) also induced the accumulation of both HSP 70 and 30 mRNAs. Finally, a mild heat shock (30 degrees C) plus a low concentration of sodium arsenite (10 microM) acted synergistically on HSP 70 and 30 mRNA accumulation in A6 cells. Thus sodium arsenite and heat act synergistically at the level of both HSP synthesis and HSP mRNA accumulation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells became thermotolerant after treatment with either heat for 10 min at 45.5 degrees C or incubation in 100 microM sodium arsenite for 1 h at 37 degrees C. Thermotolerance was tested using heat treatment at 45 degrees C or 43 degrees C administered 6-12 h after the inducing agent. At 45 degrees C thermotolerance ratios at 10(-2) isosurvival levels were 4.2 and 3.8 for heat and sodium arsenite, respectively. Recovery from heat damage as measured by resumption of protein synthesis was more rapid in heat-induced thermotolerant cells than in either sodium arsenite-induced thermotolerant cells or nonthermotolerant cells. Differences in inhibition of protein synthesis between heat-induced thermotolerant cells and sodium arsenite-induced thermotolerant cells were also evident after test heating at 43 degrees C for 5 h. At this temperature heat-induced thermotolerant cells were protected immediately from inhibition of protein synthesis, whereas sodium arsenite-induced thermotolerant cells, while initially suppressed, gradually recovered within 24 h. Furthermore, adding cycloheximide during the thermotolerance development period greatly inhibited sodium arsenite-induced thermotolerance (SF less than 10(-6] but not heat-induced thermotolerance (SF = 1.7 X 10(-1] when tested with 43 degrees C for 5 h. Our results suggest that both the development of thermotolerance and the thermotolerant state for the two agents, while similar in terms of survival, differed significantly for several parameters associated with protein synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Synthesis of a family of proteins called “heat shock” proteins is enhanced in cells in response to a wide variety of environmental stresses. This suggests that these proteins may have functions essential to cell survival under stressful conditions. A causative relationship between heat shock protein synthesis and development of thermotolerance would imply that agents known to induce heat shock protein synthesis, such as sodium arsenite, also induce thermotolerance. Conversely, agents known to induce thermotolerance, such as ethanol, would also enhance heat shock protein synthesis. To test this hypothesis, I have examined the effect of sodium arsenite or ethanol treatment on protein synthesis and cell survival in Chinese hamster ovary HA-1 cells. After either sodium arsenite or ethanol treatment, the synthesis of heat shock proteins was greatly enhanced over that of untreated cells. In parallel, cell survival was increased as much as 104-fold when cells exposed to either agent were challenged by a subsequent heat treatment. The synthesis of heat shock proteins correlated well with the development of thermotolerance. A qualitative analysis of individual proteins suggests that the synthesis of 70,000 and 87,000 molecular weight proteins most closely mirrored the development of thermotolerance. The results, therefore, strongly reinforce the hypothesis that a causal relationship exists between the enhanced synthesis of heat shock protein and cell survival under specific stresses.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Since both heat and sodium arsenite induce thermotolerance, we investigated the differences in synthesis and redistribution of stress proteins induced by these agents in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Five major heat shock proteins (HSPs; Mr 110, 87, 70, 28, and 8.5 kDa) were preferentially synthesized after heat for 10 min at 45.5 degrees C, whereas four major HSPs (Mr 110, 87, 70, and 28 kDa) and one stress protein (33.3 kDa) were preferentially synthesized after treatment with 100 microM sodium arsenite (ARS) for 1 hr. Two HSP families (HSP70a,b,c, and HSP28a,b,c) preferentially relocalized in the nucleus after heat shock. In contrast, only HSP70b redistributed into the nucleus after ARS treatment. Furthermore, the kinetics of synthesis of each member of HSP70 and HSP28 families and their redistribution were different after these treatments. The maximum rates of synthesis of HSP70 and HSP28 families, except HSP28c, were 6-9 hr after heat shock, whereas those of HSP70b and HSP28b,c were 0-2 hr after ARS treatment. In addition, the maximum rates of redistribution of HSP70 and HSP28 families occurred 3-6 hr after heat shock, whereas that of HSP70b occurred immediately after ARS treatment. The degree of redistribution of HSP70b after ARS treatment was significantly less than that after heat treatment. These results suggest that heat treatment but not sodium arsenite treatment stimulates the entry of HSP70 and HSP28 families into the nucleus.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Recent reports have demonstrated the ability of cellular stress to cause a large increase in the maximal levels of steroid receptor-mediated gene expression, a process we refer to as the heat shock potentiation effect (HSPE). In the present work, we have analyzed the time of appearance of the HSPE on the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) of L929 cells stably-transfected with the MMTV-CAT reporter plasmid (LMCAT2 cells). In LMCAT2 cells exposed to heat shock (43°C, 2-h) before addition of 1µM dexamethasone, the first appearance of HSPE (CAT levels greater that hormonealone) occurred at 8 h of recovery and continued to increase by 24 h of recovery. Treatment of LMCAT2 cells with 1 µM dexamethasone for 2 h before heat or chemical shock (sodium arsenite) resulted in the same delayed onset pattern for the HSPE. Based on a [35S]methionine assay and tests of L929 cells stably transfected with the constitutive pSV2-CAT reporter, evidence is provided that the delayed appearance of the HSPE is not due to the heat shock block of general protein synthesis or to specific repression of CAT mRNA expression or translation. By using short-term incubations (4 h) with dexamethasone during the recovery period, the peaks of HSPE expression during recovery were determined to be 12–16 h for CAT enzyme activities, and 4–8 h for CAT mRNA expression. Taken together, these results provide evidence that the timing of the HSPE is not dependent on the rate of GR activation, or on the type of stress, but rather on a factor or process that is either synthesized or activated during the recovery period following stress.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Cultured mouse lymphoma cells incorporated [3H]leucine and [32P]phosphate into nuclear stress proteins within 3 h after exposure to either elevated temperature (45 degrees C) or sodium arsenite. Radiolabeled proteins were detected by autoradiography after two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. To determine the cell cycle stage specificity of labeling, nuclei were isolated and sorted into two cell cycle phases using a fluorescent activated cell sorter. After either heat shock or sodium arsenite treatment, the majority of [3H]leucine incorporation into stress proteins occurred during the G0 + G1 phase with minimal labeling in the G2 phase. On the other hand, 32P labeling of stress proteins occurred in both the G0 + G1 and G2 phases after exposure to sodium arsenite, while incorporation of 32P was limited after heat stress. Following sodium arsenite treatment, a distinct set of four stress proteins (80-84 kDa) was detected with [3H]leucine only in G0 + G1 phase, but with [32P]phosphate these stress proteins were labeled in both G0 + G1 and G2. There was differential [32P]phosphate labeling between proteins of the 80-84 kDa set during cell cycling. Individual proteins of this set were isolated from gel plugs after sodium arsenite or heat-shock treatment. Coelectrophoresis of proteins from the two treatment groups showed that they had similar electrophoretic mobilities. All four proteins of the 80-84 kDa set (sodium arsenite induced) possessed similar polypeptide maps after digestion with V8 protease. Cytofluorometric analysis demonstrated a reduction in the number of nuclei in both S and G2 phases of the cell cycle two h after heat shock, but not following sodium arsenite treatment. However, there was a significant depression in the number of nuclei in S and G2 4 h after exposure to sodium arsenite and very modest labeling with 32P of stress proteins was observed at this time.  相似文献   

15.
Recent studies suggest that sodium arsenite downregulates NF-kappaB activity by inhibiting phosphorylation and subsequent degradation of IkappaBalpha. Many effects of sodium arsenite are secondary to induction of heat shock proteins. The role of the heat shock response in arsenite-induced inhibition of NF-kappaB, however, is not known. We examined the involvement of the heat shock response in arsenite-induced inhibition of NF-kappaB activity in IL-1beta-stimulated Caco-2 cells, a human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line with enterocytic properties. Treatment of the cells with IL-1beta resulted in increased IkappaB kinase activity, reduced levels of IkappaBalpha and increased NF-kappaB DNA binding activity. Sodium arsenite blocked all of these responses to IL-1beta without inducing changes in heat shock factor activity or heat shock protein levels. Results from additional experiments showed that the protective effect of sodium arsenite on IkappaBalpha was not influenced by the oxygen radical scavenger catalase or by inhibitors of the MAP-kinase signaling pathway. The present results suggest that sodium arsenite stabilizes IkappaBalpha and prevents NF-kappaB activation in IL-1beta-stimulated Caco-2 cells independent of the heat shock response. In addition, stabilization of IkappaBalpha by sodium arsenite does not require oxygen radical formation or activation of the MAP kinase signaling pathway.  相似文献   

16.
Expression of stress proteins is generally induced by a variety of stressors. To gain a better understanding of the sensing and induction mechanisms of stress responses, we studied the effects of culture temperature on responses to various stressors, since the induction of hsp70 in mammalian cells by heat shock is somehow modulated by culture temperature. Hsp70 was not induced by treatment with sodium arsenite, azetidine-2-carboxylic acid, or zinc sulfate at the level of heat shock factor (HSF) 1 activation in cells incubated at low temperature, although these treatments induced hsp70 in cells incubated at 37 degrees C. The repression of sodium arsenite or zinc sulfate-induced HSF1 activation by low temperature was not simply due to the inhibition of protein synthesis. On the other hand, heat shock and iodoacetamide induced HSF 1 activation in cells incubated at either temperature. Thus, there seem to be two kinds of stressors that induce HSF1 activation independently of or dependent on culture temperature. Furthermore, the reduction of glutathione level seemed to be essential for HSF1 activation by chemical stressors.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The recently-described p59 protein has been shown to be associated with untransformed steroid receptors present in rabbit uterus and rat liver cytosols (Tai, P. K., Maeda, Y., Nakao, K., Wakim, N. G., Duhring, J. L., and Faber, L. E. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 5269-5275; Renoir, J.-M., Radanyi, C., Faber, L. E., and Baulieu, E.-E. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 10740-10745), while a smaller version of this protein (p56) interacts with glucocorticoid receptors in human IM-9 cell cytosols (Sanchez, E. R., Faber, L. E., Henzel, W. J., and Pratt, W. B. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 5145-5152). In addition to interacting with glucocorticoid receptors, the p56 protein of IM-9 cell cytosol is also found as part of a large heteromeric complex that contains both the 70-kDa and 90-kDa heat shock proteins (hsp70 and hsp90, respectively). Given this association of p56 with the two major stress proteins, I have speculated that p56 may itself be a heat shock protein. In this paper, the effect of heat stress on the rate of synthesis of p56 is determined. Intact IM-9 cells were exposed to 37 or 43 degrees C for 4 h, followed by pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine. Analysis of whole cytosolic extracts by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography reveal an increased rate of radiolabeling for hsp70, hsp90, hsp100, ad hsp110, but no heat-inducible protein of smaller relative molecular mass is detected. However, immune-purification of p56 from normal and heat-stressed cytosols with the EC1 monoclonal antibody results in the presence of a 56-kDa protein that exhibits an increased rate of synthesis in response to heat stress. The results of two-dimensional gel Western blots employing the EC1 antibody demonstrate that this heat-inducible protein is indeed the EC1-reactive p56 protein and that the induction effect is not due to unequal yields of p56 during immune-purification. Heat stress has no effect on the composition of the p56.hsp.70.hsp90 complex, except that the complex derived from heat shocked-cells contains both the constitutive and heat-inducible forms of hsp70. Induction of p56 also occurs in IM-9 cells subjected to chemical stress (sodium arsenite). It is proposed that p56 is a steroid receptor-associated heat shock protein which can now be termed hsp56. Like hsp90, hsp56 likely serves in some vital cellular role apart from any specific function it provides in steroid receptor action.  相似文献   

19.
Recent data indicate that cells may acquire thermotolerance via more than one route. In this study, we observed differences in thermotolerance development in HeLa S3 cells induced by prior heating (15 minutes at 44 degrees C) or pretreatment with sodium-arsenite (1 hour at 37 degrees C, 100 microM). Inhibition of overall protein and heat shock protein (HSP) synthesis (greater than 95%) by cycloheximide (25 micrograms/ml) during tolerance development nearly completely abolished thermotolerance induced by arsenite, while significant levels of heat-induced thermotolerance were still apparent. The same dependence of protein synthesis was found for resistance against sodium-arsenite toxicity. Toxic heat, but not toxic arsenite treatments caused heat damage in the cell nucleus, measured as an increase in the protein mass of nuclei isolated from treated cells (intranuclear protein aggregation). Recovery from this intranuclear protein aggregation was observed during post-heat incubations of the cells at 37 degrees C. The rate of recovery was faster in heat-induced tolerant cells than in nontolerant cells. Arsenite-induced tolerant cells did not show an enhanced rate of recovery from the heat-induced intranuclear protein aggregation. In parallel, hyperthermic inhibition of RNA synthesis was the same in tolerant and nontolerant cells, whereas post-heat recovery was enhanced in heat-induced, but not arsenite-induced thermotolerant cells. The more rapid recovery from heat damage in the nucleus (protein aggregation and RNA synthesis) in cells made tolerant by a prior heat treatment seemed related to the ability of heat (but not arsenite) to induce HSP translocations to the nucleus.  相似文献   

20.
Ca2+ is required for the maintenance of high rates of translational initiation in GH3 pituitary cells (Chin, K.-V., Cade, C., Brostrom, C.O., Galuska, E.M., and Brostrom, M.A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 16509-16514). Following thermal stress at 46 degrees C or chemical stress from exposure to sodium arsenite or 8-hydroxyquinoline, rates of amino acid incorporation in Ca2+-restored GH3 cells were reduced acutely to those of unstressed, Ca2+-depleted control preparations. Sodium arsenite treatment resulted in loss of ability to accumulate polysomes in response to Ca2+. Stressed cells allowed to recover for 2-8 h either with or without Ca2+ in the medium exhibited comparable, increasing rates of amino acid incorporation and the induction of heat shock proteins (hsp). Abolition of the Ca2+-dependent component of translation was proportional to the intensity of the stress. Mild thermal stress (41 degrees C) resulted in the induction of hsp 68 and the retention of Ca2+-dependent protein synthesis; hsp 68 was synthesized in a Ca2+-dependent manner. After arsenite stress, restoration of the Ca2+ requirement for protein synthesis occurred by 24 h, and was preceded by a transitional period during which polysomes accumulated in response to Ca2+ without concomitant increased rates of incorporation. Responses to stress are proposed to include an acute inhibition of normal protein synthesis involving the destruction of Ca2+-stimulated initiation and a protracted period of recovery involving synthesis of the hsp accompanied by Ca2+-independent amino acid incorporation and slowed peptide chain elongation.  相似文献   

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