Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1974254 | Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2007 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Prior exposure to extreme temperatures can induce thermoprotection in migratory locusts, which is important for survival in their natural environment. An important motor activity that needs to be protected is ventilation. The mechanism underlying heat shock is not fully understood, and our goal was to test the idea that cytoskeletal stability is critical for such thermoprotection. Cytoskeletal stabilizers (concanavalin A) and destabilizers (colchicine) were bath-applied in semi-intact locust preparations in both control (C) and pre-treated heat-shocked (3 h, 45 °C) animals. We measured parameters of the ventilatory motor pattern during maintained high temperature (43 °C) and recorded the times taken for motor pattern generation to fail and then recover on returning to room temperature. We found that concanavalin A mimicked the effects of a prior heat stress in control animals by increasing time to failure and decreasing time to recovery of motor pattern generation. However, colchicine destroyed protection in heat-shocked animals by decreasing time to failure and increasing time to recovery. Our findings confirm that the cytoskeleton has a mechanistic role in preserving neural function at high temperatures, possibly through stabilizing ion channels and other integral membrane proteins (e.g. Na+/K+ ATPase) and their interactions with heat shock proteins.
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Authors
Kristopher M. Garlick, R. Meldrum Robertson,