Journal article
The capacity of Drosophila to heat harden associates with low rates of heat-shocked protein synthesis
TK Johnson, FE Cockerell, LB Carrington, L Rako, AA Hoffmann, SW McKechnie
Journal of Thermal Biology | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2009
Abstract
The thermotolerance of a species or of an ecotype is important for determining its habitat range and vigour, and considerable research has focused on identifying underlying physiological, biochemical and genetic bases of thermotolerance traits. Rates of protein synthesis in tissues when organisms experience a sudden heat stress as occurs on rare hot days may be important to avoid heat-induced paralysis and to survive. While natural variation in Drosophila melanogaster thermotolerance has been associated with heat-shock gene expression, little attention has been given to examining the thermo-protective role of protein synthesis generally. Using two independently derived sets of single-pair ma..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Rebecca Hallas, Jennifer Shirriffs and Rhonda Rawlinson for assistance with the experimental work and the Australian Research Council for financial support through their Special Research Centre Program.