thapsigargin has been researched along with geldanamycin* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for thapsigargin and geldanamycin
Article | Year |
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Tungstate-induced color-pattern modifications of butterfly wings are independent of stress response and ecdysteroid effect.
Systemic injections of sodium tungstate, a protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) inhibitor, to pupae immediately after pupation have been shown to efficiently produce characteristic color-pattern modifications on the wings of many species of butterflies. Here we demonstrated that the tungstate-induced modification pattern was entirely different from other chemically-induced ones in a species of nymphalid butterfly Junonia (Precis) orithya. In this species, the systemic injections of tungstate produced characteristic expansion of black area and shrinkage of white area together with the move of parafocal elements toward the wing base. Overall, pattern boundaries became obscure. In contrast, an entirely different modification pattern, overall darkening of wings, was observed by the injections of stress-inducing chemicals, thapsigargin, ionomycin, or geldanamycin, to pupae under the rearing conditions for the adult summer form. On the ventral wings, this darkening was due to an increase of the proportion of peppered dark scales, which was reminiscent of the natural fall form of this species. Under the same rearing conditions, the injections of ecdysteroid, which is a well-known hormone being responsible for the seasonal polyphenism of nymphalid butterflies, yielded overall expansion of orange area especially around eyespots. Taken together, we conclude that the tungstate-induced modifications are clearly distinguishable from those of stress response and ecdysteroid effect. This conclusion then suggests that the putative PTPase signaling pathway that is sensitive to tungstate uniquely contributes to the wing-wide color-pattern development in butterflies. Topics: Animals; Benzoquinones; Butterflies; Color; Dimethyl Sulfoxide; Ecdysteroids; Ionomycin; Lactams, Macrocyclic; Phenotype; Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases; Quinones; Thapsigargin; Tungsten Compounds; Wings, Animal | 2005 |
Heat shock protein 90 modulates the unfolded protein response by stabilizing IRE1alpha.
The molecular chaperone HSP90 regulates stability and function of multiple protein kinases. The HSP90-binding drug geldanamycin interferes with this activity and promotes proteasome-dependent degradation of most HSP90 client proteins. Geldanamycin also binds to GRP94, the HSP90 paralog located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Because two of three ER stress sensors are transmembrane kinases, namely IRE1alpha and PERK, we investigated whether HSP90 is necessary for the stability and function of these proteins. We found that HSP90 associates with the cytoplasmic domains of both kinases. Both geldanamycin and the HSP90-specific inhibitor, 514, led to the dissociation of HSP90 from the kinases and a concomitant turnover of newly synthesized and existing pools of these proteins, demonstrating that the continued association of HSP90 with the kinases was required to maintain their stability. Further, the previously reported ability of geldanamycin to stimulate ER stress-dependent transcription apparently depends on its interaction with GRP94, not HSP90, since geldanamycin but not 514 led to up-regulation of BiP. However, this effect is eventually superseded by HSP90-dependent destabilization of unfolded protein response signaling. These data establish a role for HSP90 in the cellular transcriptional response to ER stress and demonstrate that chaperone systems on both sides of the ER membrane serve to integrate this signal transduction cascade. Topics: Activating Transcription Factor 6; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Benzoquinones; Cell Line; DNA-Binding Proteins; eIF-2 Kinase; Endoplasmic Reticulum; Endoribonucleases; Enzyme Inhibitors; Genes, Reporter; HSP90 Heat-Shock Proteins; Humans; Isoenzymes; Lactams, Macrocyclic; Membrane Proteins; Molecular Chaperones; Protein Binding; Protein Folding; Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases; Quinones; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Rifabutin; Signal Transduction; Thapsigargin; Transcription Factors | 2002 |