Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1973502 Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
Heat shock protein 110 (HSP110) is a large molecular mass chaperone that is part of the HSP70/DnaK superfamily. In the present study, we examined the accumulation of HSP110 in Xenopus laevis A6 kidney epithelial cells. Immunoblot analysis, using a homologous antibody, detected the presence of HSP110 in A6 cells maintained at 22 °C. The relative levels of HSP110 accumulation increased after heat shock or sodium arsenite treatment. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed that constitutively expressed HSP110 was localized in the cytoplasm in a diffuse granular pattern with enrichment in the nucleus. In A6 cells heat shocked at 33 °C or 35 °C for 2 to 4 h, HSP110 accumulation was enhanced and detected primarily in the cytoplasm as thread- or spindle-like structures. In contrast, HSP30 was not detected constitutively and heat shock treatment of A6 cells induced a relatively uniform punctate pattern primarily in the cytoplasm. Also, treatment of A6 cells at 35 °C for 6 h resulted in the presence of HSP110 and HSP30 enriched in the nucleus of most cells. Finally, A6 cells treated with 25 μM sodium arsenite produced very dense HSP110 structures primarily in the cytoplasm while HSP30 was enriched in the cytoplasm in a granular pattern.
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