Abstract

Previous research on Antarctic notothenioid fishes demonstrated the loss of the heat-shock response characterized by the rapid synthesis of molecular chaperones in response to increasing pools of damaged proteins. We determined that this loss was the result of constitutive expression of the inducible hsp70 gene. In this study, we examined the extent of this unique expression pattern in Antarctic fish by comparing the expression of two genes, the constitutive hsc71 gene and the inducible hsp70 gene, in tissues from Trematomus bernacchii to expression in tissues of Pagothenia borchgrevinki, a second Antarctic notothenioid, and Lycodichthys dearborni, a phylogenetically distant Antarctic species. Our study indicated that the expression of hsc71 is similar in all species; however, the constitutive expression of the inducible hsp70 gene was also manifested in these species. These data further suggest that cold denaturation of proteins at ecologically relevant temperatures may be contributing to this change in expression of the hsp70 gene.

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