Abstract

Effect of heat shock on the growth of cultured sugarcane cells (Saccharum officinarum L.) was measured. Heat shock (HS) treatment at 36 to 38°C (2 hours) induced the development of maximum thermotolerance to otherwise nonpermissive heat stress at 54°C (7 minutes). Optimum thermotolerance was observed 8 hours after heat shock. Development of thermotolerance was initiated by treatments as short as 30 minutes at 36°C. Temperatures below 36°C or above 40°C failed to induce maximum thermotolerance. In vivo labeling revealed that HS at 32 to 34°C induced several high molecular mass heat shock proteins (HSPs). A complex of 18 kilodalton HSPs required at least 36°C treatment for induction. The majority of the HSPs began to accumulate within 10 minutes, whereas the synthesis of low molecular mass peptides in the 18 kilodalton range became evident 30 minutes after initiation of HS. HS above 38°C resulted in progressively decreased HSP synthesis with inhibition first observed for HSPs larger than 50 kilodaltons. Analysis of two-dimensional gels revealed a complex pattern of label incorporation including the synthesis of four major HSPs in the 18 kilodalton range and continued synthesis of constitutive proteins during HS.

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This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture under Cooperative State Research Service Special Grant 86-CSRS-2-2828 to H. M. H., managed by the Pacific Basin Advisory Group, and by a grant from the University of Hawaii Faculty Research Council. Hawaii Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources Journal Series No. 3294.

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