Abstract

Goldfish Carassius auratus were acclimated to either 10 or 30°C for a minimum of 5 weeks. A 65-kDa protein specific to warm-temperature-acclimated fish was extracted from the gel with 70% formic acid after two-dimensional electrophoresis of the muscle cytoplasmic protein fraction. The 65-kDa protein thus prepared to homogeneity was used to raise specific antibodies in rabbit by conventional methods. The antibody produced exhibited specific reaction with a protein having the same molecular weight from brain and liver tissue, suggesting that the 65-kDa protein is a ubiquitous cytosolic component in warm-acclimated goldfish. When water temperature was increased from 20 to 30°C over a 20-h period, a prominent amount of the 65-kDa protein was observed in muscle tissue extracts within 5 days of additional rearing; this was demonstrated by immunoblotting with the specific antibody. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the 65-kDa protein was determined as Asp-Glu-Pro-Gln-Gly-His-Gln-His (or Asp)-Glu-Leu, differing from that of a family of known heat-shock proteins having about 70 kDa in molecular mass (hsp 70). No interaction between ATP and the 65-kDa protein revealed by ATP-agarose affinity chromatography further confirmed the different properties of the 65-kDa protein from those of hsp 70.

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