Identification of a small heat shock/alpha-crystallin protein in the scleractinian coral Madracis mirabilis (Duch. and Mitch.)

Citation
Ma. Branton et al., Identification of a small heat shock/alpha-crystallin protein in the scleractinian coral Madracis mirabilis (Duch. and Mitch.), CAN J ZOOL, 77(5), 1999, pp. 675-682
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE ZOOLOGIE
ISSN journal
00084301 → ACNP
Volume
77
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
675 - 682
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4301(199905)77:5<675:IOASHS>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Immunological evidence is provided for the first time of a small heat shock /alpha-crystallin protein in the scleractinian coral Madracis mirabilis. Th e protein termed cp26, had a molecular weight of 26 000; it reacted with an antibody raised to a small heat shock/alpha-crystallin protein from Artemi a franciscana and its production in corals was temperature sensitive. Coral s collected from seawater at 25.5 degrees C or lower lacked cp26, but the p rotein was produced in some of these animals when they were heat shocked ex perimentally. When exposed naturally to high environmental temperatures for relatively short times, corals contained cp26 and responded to heat shock in the laboratory. Corals growing at elevated temperatures tended to die wh en subjected to additional heat stress. Specifically, M. mirabilis died at about 31-33 degrees C, as indicated by visual inspection of the animals, lo w recovery of protein in cell-free extracts, and loss of protein bands in S DS-polyacrylamide gels. Death was accompanied by the appearance of a diffus e, unidentified protein band on western blots that reacted with an antibody to cp26. Madracis mirabilis clearly reacts to heat shock by production of cp26; further study is required to determine if this small heat shock/alpha -crystallin protein will be a useful biomarker of stress in corals.