Intraocular injection of [35S~methionine wasused to demonstrate the pronounced induction of a 74-kDa heat shock protein in the rabbit retina after a 3YC increase in body temperature was generated by intravenous administration of D-lysergic acid diethylamide. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography revealed that the induced heat shock protein underwent axonal transport from retinal ganglion cells into the optic nerve and subsequently down the contralateral optic tract to synaptic termini in the visual projection area. Since the heat shock protein took more than 8 days to move down the optic nerve to the superior colliculus, it is transported by slow rather than by fast axonal transport.
In vitro incubation of the isolated rabbit retina at elevated temperature results in the synthesis of a heat shock protein of M.W. 74,000 (hsp74). Recently we have demonstrated that this protein is associated with preparations of purified retinal microtubules and intermediate filaments. In order to examine the possibility that hsp74 synthesis is related to cytoskeletal stability, the effects of agents known to specifically affect microtubules were examined using an in vitro retinal system. Taxol, an antimitotic agent which stabilizes microtubules, was found to reduce the level of hsp74 synthesized in response to elevated temperature. Colchicine, a potent microtubule de-stabilizing agent, did not induce hsp74 synthesis in the absence of elevated temperature, however, under heat shock conditions, hsp74 synthesis was elevated in the presence of colchicine. Kinetics of microtubule assembly were similar in preparations isolated from cerebral hemispheres of control and hyperthermic animals however, microtubules from the latter were altered in appearance and exhibited a higher degree of crosslinking.
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