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Plant Physiology 75:639-644 (1984)
© 1984 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Heat Shock Proteins in Tobacco Cell Suspension during Growth Cycle 1

Jan Kanabus, Craig S. Pikaard and Joe H. Cherry

Horticulture Department, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv Wisconsin 38) cells grown in suspension culture at 26°C produce heat shock proteins (HSPs) when exposed to elevated temperature of 34 to 42°C. At 34 and 38°C, synthesis of normal proteins is maintained while HSPs are expressed within 30 minutes after initiation of the shock. At 42°C, HSPs are still expressed but normal proteins are made at a reduced rate or not at all. Exposure of cells to 38°C allows for a full expression of HSPs without inhibition of the synthesis of normal proteins. Induced synthesis of HSPs at 38°C is maximal 1 to 2 hours after elevation of temperature and diminishes thereafter through at least 6 hours. Cells growing asynchronously in the logarithmic phase of growth produce HSPs at a much higher rate than those in the stationary phase. The ability to synthesize HSPs disappears about one generation time before the cells reach a growth plateau.


1 Supported in part by the American Soybean Association Research Foundation, St. Louis, MO. Some of these results were presented at the annual meeting of the ASPP in Fort Collins, CO, in August 1983. Published as Journal Paper no. 9694 of the Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station.







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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society of Plant Biologists