Ps. Amy et al., PROTEIN-PRODUCTION DURING HEAT-STRESS AND EXPOSURE TO TOXICANTS IN ALCALIGENES-EUTROPHUS JMP228, Environmental toxicology and water quality, 8(2), 1993, pp. 153-162
In an effort to determine whether heat-shock proteins might serve as u
seful indicators of environmental stress, the aquatic bacterium, Alcal
igenes eutrophus JMP228, was exposed to two chemical stressors: a toxi
c heavy metal ion, cadmium, and a nonbiodegradable organic herbicide,
2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5-T). Protein synthesis was ana
lyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, co
mparing the protein patterns of chemically stressed cells to those exh
ibited by nontreated and heat-shocked cells. Heat-shock proteins were
produced in response to both chemical stressors and heat. Proteins ind
uced in response to all three experimental stresses include molecules
with approximate molecular weights of 58-60 and 106 kDa. Still other s
tress proteins were only expressed following chemical stress. A 106 kD
a protein was only produced following cadmium treatment, whereas prote
ins of 37, 39, 46, 49, and 77 kDa were only produced in response to 2,
4,5-T. The synthesis of some of the unique stress proteins varied in a
dose-dependent fashion with the concentration of the individual stres
sors. The presence of these proteins may be useful indicators of the '
'health'' of an environment.