INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE TO HYPOTHERMIA AND HYPERTHERMIA BY A COMMON MECHANISM IN MAMMALIAN-CELLS

Citation
Dj. Glofcheski et al., INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE TO HYPOTHERMIA AND HYPERTHERMIA BY A COMMON MECHANISM IN MAMMALIAN-CELLS, Journal of cellular physiology, 156(1), 1993, pp. 104-111
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology,"Cytology & Histology
ISSN journal
00219541
Volume
156
Issue
1
Year of publication
1993
Pages
104 - 111
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9541(1993)156:1<104:IOTTHA>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
Pretreatment by hypothermic (25-degrees-C) cycling (PHC) of attached e xponential-phase V79 Chinese hamster cells by Method 4(24 hr at 25-deg rees-C + 1.5 hr at 37-degrees-C + 24 hr at 25-degrees-C + trypsin + 3 hr at 37-degrees-C) or by Method 3 (48 hr at 25-degrees-C + trypsin 3 hr at 37-degrees-C) make mammalian V79 cells significantly more resi stant to 43-degrees-C hyperthermia. There is no significant difference in the 43-degrees-C curves whether Method 3 or 4 is used for pre-expo sure. If pre-exposure is at 15 or 10-degrees-C, the resistance to hype rthermia is significantly reduced. PHC by Method 4 significantly incre ases survival of cells exposed to 5-degrees-C and, to a lesser extent, to 10-degrees-C. The increase in hyper- and hypothermic survival afte r PHC cannot be accounted for by changes in cell cycle distribution. H eat-shock protein synthesis is not induced by PHC; hence, protection d oes not result from newly synthesized proteins. When cells are made to lerant to hyperthermia by a pretreatment in 2% DMSO for 24 hr at 37-de grees-C (Method 8), the cells are not more resistant to subsequent exp osures to hypothermia, either at 5 or 10-degrees-C. The results imply that there may be two mechanisms of inducing resistance to hyperthermi a, only one of which also confers resistance to hypothermia. (C) 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.