Heat Shock Proteins in Maize

Abstract
The pattern of protein synthesis in roots of 3-day-old maize seedlings (Zea mays L.) is rapidly and dramatically altered when the incubation temperature is raised from 25 to 40°C. One-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate gels reveal that although synthesis of the proteins observed at 25°C continues at 40°C, a new set of `heat shock proteins' (hsp) is induced within 20 minutes of the temperature transition. The hsp have molecular weights of 87, 85, 79, 78, 77, 72, 70, 27, 22, and 18 kilodaltons. The 10 hsp are visible on autoradiograms but not on stained gels, suggesting that the proteins do not accumulate to any great extent.