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1.
A reduction in neurofilament (NF) protein synthesis and changes in their phosphorylation state are observed during nerve regeneration. To investigate how such metabolic changes are involved in the reorganization of the axonal cytoskeleton, we studied the injury-induced changes in the solubility and axonal transport of NF proteins as well as their phosphorylation states in the rat sciatic nerve. In the control nerve, 15-25% of high-molecular-mass NF subunit (NF-H) was recovered in the 1% Triton-soluble fraction when fractionated in the presence of phosphatase inhibitors. After a complete loss of NF proteins distal to the injury site (70-75 mm from the spinal cord) 1 week after injury, NF-H detected in the regenerating sprouts at 2 weeks or later exhibited higher solubility (>50%) and lower C-terminal phosphorylation level than NF-H in the control nerve. Solubility increase was also apparent with L-[35S]methionine-labeled NF-H that was in transit in the proximal axon at the time of injury. The low-molecular-mass subunit remained in the insoluble fraction in both the normal and the regenerating nerves, indicating that selective solubilization of NF-H rather than total filament disassembly occurs during regeneration.  相似文献   

2.
Axonal transport of neurofilament (NFs) is considered to be regulated by phosphorylation. While existing evidence for this hypothesis is compelling, supportive studies have been largely restricted to correlative evidence and/or experimental systems involving mutants. We tested this hypothesis in retinal ganglion cells of normal mice in situ by comparing subunit transport with regional phosphorylation state coupled with inhibition of phosphatases. NF subunits were radiolabeled by intravitreal injection of 35S-methionine. NF axonal transport was monitored by following the location of the peak of radiolabeled subunits immunoprecipitated from 9x1.1 mm segments of optic axons. An abrupt decline transport rate was observed between days 1 and 6, which corresponded to translocation of the peak of radiolabeled subunits from axonal segment 2 into segment 3. Notably, this is far downstream from the only caliber increase of optic axons at 150 mu from the retina. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated a unique threefold increase between segments 2 and 3 in levels of a "late-appearing" C-terminal NF-H phospho-epitope (RT97). Intravitreal injection of the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid increased RT97 immunoreactivity within retinas and proximal axons, and markedly decreased NF transport rate out of retinas and proximal axons. These findings provide in situ experimental evidence for regulation of NF transport by site-specific phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the role of neurofilament (NF) proteins in Alzheimer disease (AD) neurofibrillary degeneration. The levels and degree of phosphorylation of NF proteins in AD neocortex were determined by Western blots developed with a panel of phosphorylation-dependent NF antibodies. Levels of all three NF subunits and the degree of phosphorylation of NF-H and NF-M were significantly increased in AD as compared to Huntington disease brains used as control tissue. The increase in the levels of NF-H and NF-M was 1.7- and 1.5-fold (P<0.01) as determined by monoclonal antibody SMI33, and was 1.6-fold (P<0.01) in NF-L using antibody NR4. The phosphorylation of NF-H and NF-M in AD was increased respectively at the SMI31 epitope by 1.6- and 1.9-fold (P<0.05) and at the SMI33 epitope by 2.7- and 1.3-fold (P<0.01 and P<0.05). Essentially similar effects were observed in SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells when treated with okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatase (PP)-2A and -1. This is the first biochemical evidence which unambiguously demonstrates the hyperphosphorylation and the accumulation of NF subunits in AD brain, and shows that the inhibition of PP-2A/PP-1 activities can lead to the hyperphosphorylation of NF-H and NF-M subunits.  相似文献   

4.
Neurofilaments (NFs) are essential cytoskeletal filaments that impart mechanical integrity to nerve cells. They are assembled from three distinct molecular mass proteins that bind to each other to form a 10-nm-diameter filamentous rod with sidearm extensions. The sidearms are considered to play a critical role in modulating interfilament spacing and axonal caliber. However, the precise mechanism by which NF protrusions regulate axonal diameter remains to be well understood. In particular, the role played by individual NF protrusions in specifying interfilament distances is yet to be established. To gain insight into the role of individual proteins, we investigated the structural organization of NF architecture under different phosphorylation conditions. To this end, a physically motivated sequence-based coarse-grain model of NF brush has been developed based on the three-dimensional architecture of NFs. The model incorporates the charge distribution of sidearms, including charges from the phosphorylation sites corresponding to Lys-Ser-Pro repeat motifs. The model also incorporates the proper grafting of the real NF sidearms based on the stoichiometry of the three subunits. The equilibrium structure of the NF brush is then investigated under different phosphorylation conditions. The phosphorylation of NF modifies the structural organization of sidearms. Upon phosphorylation, a dramatic change involving a transformation from a compact conformation to an extended conformation is found in the heavy NF (NF-H) protein. However, in spite of extensive phosphorylation sites present in the NF-H subunit, the tails of the medium NF subunit are found to be more extended than the NF-H sidearms. This supports the notion that medium NF protrusions are critical in regulating NF spacings and, hence, axonal caliber.  相似文献   

5.
Propionic and methylmalonic acidemias are inherited neurometabolic disorders biochemically characterized by tissue accumulation of propionic (PA) and methylmalonic (MMA) acids, respectively. Neurofilaments (NF) are important cytoskeletal proteins and phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of NF is important to stabilize the cytoskeleton. We investigated the effects of PA and MMA on the high molecular weight neurofilament subunit associated with the cytoskeletal fraction of rat cerebral cortex along development. Cortical slices from 9- to 60-day-old rats were incubated with 2.5 mM PA or MMA. The cytoskeletal fraction was extracted and the immunoreactivity for phosphorylated or total NF-H was analyzed by immunoblotting using specific antibodies. Results showed that treatment of tissue slices with the acids induced an increased Triton-insoluble phosphorylated NF-H immunoreactivity in up to 17-day-old rats. Furthermore, treatments significantly increased the total amount of NF-H in 12-day-old rats. These findings indicate that PA and MMA alter the dynamic regulation of NF-H assembly in the cytoskeletal fraction.  相似文献   

6.
Dephosphorylation-induced interactions of neurofilaments with microtubules   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Effects of dephosphorylation on interactions of neurofilaments (NFs) with microtubules (MTs) were studied by the cosedimentation method. Centrifugation conditions were chosen so that MTs pelleted but NFs did not. While NFs isolated from bovine spinal cords did not cosediment with MTs polymerized in the presence of taxol, NFs dephosphorylated with Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase began to coprecipitate with MTs. The dephosphorylated NFs bound to MTs but not to the unpolymerized tubulin dimer. The binding was not observed in the presence of high salt or with MTs containing microtubule-associated proteins. The cosedimentation experiments using purified NF subunit proteins showed that the dephosphorylation-induced binding of NFs to MTs was mediated by the largest subunit of NF (NF-H). Negative staining electron microscopy confirmed bindings of the dephosphorylated NFs and NF-H to MTs. Densitometric measurement of the bound and unbound NF-H after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the binding of the dephosphorylated NF-H to MT was saturable and gave the following binding parameters. Approximately 1 mol of NF-H bound per 10 mol of tubulin dimer with a high affinity site (Kd = 3.8 x 10(-8) M) and per 16 mol of tubulin dimer with a low affinity site (Kd = 1.1 x 10(-7) M).  相似文献   

7.
Axonal transport of neurofilaments (NFs) has long been considered to be regulated by phosphorylation. We present evidence that in optic axons of normal mice, the rate of NF axonal transport is inversely correlated with the NF phosphorylation state. In addition to 200 kDa NF-H and 145 kDa NF-M, axonal cytoskeletons from CNS contained a range of phospho-variants of NF-H migrating between 160-200 kDa, and of NF-M migrating at 97-145 kDa. While 160 kDa phospho-variants of NF-H have been well characterized, we confirmed the identity of the previously-described 97 kDa species as a hypophospho-variant of NF-M since (1) pulse-chase metabolic labeling confirmed the 97 kDa species to be a new synthesis product that was converted by phosphorylation over time into a form migrating at 145 kDa, (2) the 97 kDa protein reacted with multiple NF-M antibodies, including one specific for hypophosphorylated NF-M, and (3) dephosphorylation converted NF-M isoforms to 97 kDa. Autoradiographic analyses following metabolic radiolabeling demonstrated that hypophosphorylated NF-H and NF-M isoforms underwent substantially more rapid transport in situ than did extensively phosphorylated isoforms, while NF-H subunits bearing a developmentally delayed C-terminal phospho-epitope transported at a rate slower than that of total 200 kDa NF-H. Differential transport of phospho-variants also highlights that these variants are not homogeneously distributed among NFs, but are segregated to some extent among distinct, although probably overlapping, NF populations, indicating that axonal NFs are not homogeneous with respect to phosphorylation state.  相似文献   

8.
To clarify the role of the neurofilament (NF) medium (NF-M) and heavy (NF-H) subunits, we generated mice with targeted disruption of both NF-M and NF-H genes. The absence of the NF-M subunit resulted in a two- to threefold reduction in the caliber of large myelinated axons, whereas the lack of NF-H subunits had little effect on the radial growth of motor axons. In NF-M-/- mice, the velocity of axonal transport of NF light (NF-L) and NF-H proteins was increased by about two-fold, whereas the steady-state levels of assembled NF-L were reduced. Although the NF-M or NF-H subunits are each dispensable for the formation of intermediate filaments, the absence of both subunits in double NF-M; NF-H knockout mice led to a scarcity of intermediate filament structures in axons and to a marked approximately twofold increase in the number of microtubules. Protein analysis indicated that the levels of NF-L and alpha-internexin proteins were reduced dramatically throughout the nervous system. Immunohistochemistry of spinal cord from the NF-M-/-;NF-H-/- mice revealed enhanced NF-L staining in the perikaryon of motor neurons but a weak NF-L staining in axons. In addition, axonal transport studies carried out by the injection of [35S]methionine into spinal cord revealed after 30 days very low levels of newly synthesized NF-L proteins in the sciatic nerve of NF-M-/-;NF-H-/- mice. The combined results demonstrate a requirement of the high-molecular-weight subunits for the assembly of type IV intermediate filament proteins and for the efficient translocation of NF-L proteins into the axonal compartment.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphorylation of neurofilament-L protein (NF-L) by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase) inhibits the reassembly of NF-L and disassembles filamentous NF-L. The effects of phosphorylation by A-kinase on native neurofilaments (NF) composed of three distinct subunits: NF-L, NF-M, and NF-H, however, have not yet been described. In this paper, we examined the effects of phosphorylation of NF proteins by A-kinase on both native and reassembled filaments containing all three NF subunits. In the native NF, A-kinase phosphorylated each NF subunit with stoichiometries of 4 mol/mol for NF-L, 6 mol/mol for NF-M, and 4 mol/mol for NF-H. The extent of NF-L phosphorylation in the native NF was nearly the same as that of purified NF-L. However, phosphorylation did not cause the native NFs to disassemble into oligomers, as was the case for purified NF-L. Instead, partial fragmentation was detected in sedimentation experiments and by electron microscopic observations. This is probably not due to the presence of the three NF subunits in NF or to differences in phosphorylation sites because reassembled NF containing all three NF subunits were disassembled into oligomeric forms by phosphorylation with A-kinase and the phosphorylation by A-kinase occurred at the head domain of NF-L whether NF were native or reassembled. Disassembling intermediates of reassembled NF containing all three NF subunits were somewhat different from disassembling intermediates of NF-L. Thinning and loosening of filaments was frequently observed preceding complete disassembly. From the fact that the thinning was also observed in the native filaments phosphorylated by A-kinase, it is reasonable to propose the native NF is fragmented through a process of thinning that is stimulated by phosphorylation in the head domain of the NF subunits.  相似文献   

10.
Recent studies demonstrate co-localization of kinesin with neurofilament (NF) subunits in culture and suggest that kinesin participates in NF subunit distribution. We sought to determine whether kinesin was also associated with NF subunits in situ. Axonal transport of NF subunits in mouse optic nerve was perturbed by the microtubule (MT)-depolymerizing drug vinblastine, indicating that NF transport was dependent upon MT dynamics. Kinesin co-precipitated during immunoprecipitation of NF subunits from optic nerve. The association of NFs and kinesin was regulated by NF phosphorylation, since (1) NF subunits bearing developmentally delayed phospho-epitopes did not co-purify in a microtubule motor preparation from CNS while less phosphorylated forms did; (2) subunits bearing these phospho-epitopes were selectively not co-precipitated with kinesin; and (3) phosphorylation under cell-free conditions diminished the association of NF subunits with kinesin. The nature and extent of this association was further examined by intravitreal injection of (35)S-methionine and monitoring NF subunit transport along optic axons. As previously described by several laboratories, the wave of NF subunits underwent a progressive broadening during continued transport. The front, but not the trail, of this broadening wave of NF subunits was co-precipitated with kinesin, indicating that (1) the fastest-moving NFs were associated with kinesin, and (2) that dissociation from kinesin may foster trailing of NF subunits during continued transport. These data suggest that kinesin participates in NF axonal transport either by directly translocating NFs and/or by linking NFs to transporting MTs. Both Triton-soluble as well as cytoskeleton-associated NF subunits were co-precipitated with kinesin; these data are considered in terms of the form(s) in which NF subunits undergo axonal transport.  相似文献   

11.
It has recently been shown that a monoclonal antibody SM 1-36-2 against connectin, an elastic filament of striated muscles, binds to the "elastic" domain of the molecule, and that the H subunit of neurofilament (NF-H), an intermediate filament of nerve cells, shares a homologous domain (Shimizu, T. et al. (1988) Biomed. Res. 9, 227-234 and Itoh, Y. et al. (1988) J. Biochem. 104, 504-508). In order to characterize (1) the intramolecular localization of the domain in the NF-H and (2) the effect of the phosphorylation state on the immunoreactivity, the homologous domain in the NF-H was analyzed by Western blotting after limited digestion with trypsin or alpha-chymotrypsin and dephosphorylation with E. coli alkaline phosphatase. It was found that (1) the epitope was located not in the core region but in the carboxyl-terminal peripheral (cross-bridge) region of NF-H and (2) the epitopes in connectin and NF-H were not affected by the phosphorylation state.  相似文献   

12.
Newly synthesized neurofilaments or protofilaments are incorporated into a highly stable stationary cytoskeleton network as they are transported along axons. Although the heavily phosphorylated carboxyl-terminal tail domains of the heavy and medium neurofilament (NF) subunits have been proposed to contribute to this process and particularly to stability of this structure, their function is still obscure. Here we show in NF-H/M tail deletion [NF-(H/M)tailΔ] mice that the deletion of both of these domains selectively lowers NF levels 3–6 fold along optic axons without altering either rates of subunit synthesis or the rate of slow axonal transport of NF. Pulse labeling studies carried out over 90 days revealed a significantly faster rate of disappearance of NF from the stationary NF network of optic axons in NF-(H/M)tailΔ mice. Faster NF disappearance was accompanied by elevated levels of NF-L proteolytic fragments in NF-(H/M)tailΔ axons. We conclude that NF-H and NF-M C-terminal domains do not normally regulate NF transport rates as previously proposed, but instead increase the proteolytic resistance of NF, thereby stabilizing the stationary neurofilament cytoskeleton along axons.  相似文献   

13.
The COOH-terminal tail of mammalian neurofilament heavy subunit (NF-H), the largest neurofilament subunit, contains 44-51 lysine-serine-proline repeats that are nearly stoichiometrically phosphorylated after assembly into neurofilaments in axons. Phosphorylation of these repeats has been implicated in promotion of radial growth of axons, control of nearest neighbor distances between neurofilaments or from neurofilaments to other structural components in axons, and as a determinant of slow axonal transport. These roles have now been tested through analysis of mice in which the NF-H gene was replaced by one deleted in the NF-H tail. Loss of the NF-H tail and all of its phosphorylation sites does not affect the number of neurofilaments, alter the ratios of the three neurofilament subunits, or affect the number of microtubules in axons. Additionally, it does not reduce interfilament spacing of most neurofilaments, the speed of action potential propagation, or mature cross-sectional areas of large motor or sensory axons, although its absence slows the speed of acquisition of normal diameters. Most surprisingly, at least in optic nerve axons, loss of the NF-H tail does not affect the rate of transport of neurofilament subunits.  相似文献   

14.
We sought the mammalian neurofilament tail domain-specific kinase. Several well known kinases including cAMP-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C, Ca(2+)-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, casein kinase I, and casein kinase II phosphorylated the high (NF-H) and middle molecular mass subunit (NF-M) of bovine neurofilaments, but they did not reduced the electrophoretic mobility of the dephosphorylated form of NF-M and NF-H by phosphorylation nor was the amount of phosphorylation increased by dephosphorylation of NF proteins, indicating that the phosphorylation sites by these kinases are not major in vivo phosphorylation sites at the tail domain. In contrast, cdc2 kinase phosphorylated specifically the dephosphorylated form of NF-H. 4 mol of phosphates were incorporated per mol of NF-H and this phosphorylation returned the electrophoretic mobility of the dephosphorylated form of NF-H to the position of the isolated, fully phosphorylated form of NF-H. Furthermore, the phosphorylation by cdc2 kinase dissociated the binding of dephosphorylated NF-H to microtubules. Phosphorylation sites were located at the carboxyl-terminal tail domain. The KSPXK motif, but not KSPXX, in the repetitive sequence was suggested to be the phosphorylation site by using synthetic peptides.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: Neurofilament (NF) protein [high molecular mass (NF-H)] is extensively phosphorylated in vivo. The phosphorylation occurs mainly in its characteristic KSP (Lys-Ser-Pro) repeat motifs. There are two major types of KSP motifs in the NF-H tail domain: KSPXKX and KSPXXX. Recent studies by two different laboratories have demonstrated the presence of a cdc2-like kinase [cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (cdk5)] in nervous tissue that selectively phosphorylates KSPXKX and XS/TXK motifs in NF-H and lysine-rich histone (H1). This article describes the identification of phosphatases dephosphorylating three different substrates: histone (H1), NF-H in a NF preparation, and a bacterially expressed C-terminal tail domain of NF-H, each containing KSPXKX repeats phosphorylated in vitro by cdk5. Among various phosphatases identified, protein phosphatase (PP) 2A from rabbit skeletal muscle appeared to be the most effective phosphatase in in vitro assays. Three phosphatase activity peaks—P1, P2, and P3—were partially purified from frozen rat spinal cord by ion exchange and size exclusion column chromatography and then characterized on the basis of biochemical, pharmacological, and immunochemical studies. One of the three peaks was identified as PP2A, whereas the others were mixtures of both PP2A and PP1. These three peaks could dephosphorylate cdk5-phosphorylated 32P-histone (H1), 32P-NF-H in the NF preparation, and 32P-NF-H tail fusion protein. These studies suggest the involvement of PP2A or a PP2A-like activity in the regulation of the phosphorylation state of KSPXKX motifs in NF-H.  相似文献   

16.
17.
In neurons the phosphorylation of neurofilament (NF) proteins NF-M and NF-H is topographically regulated. Although kinases and NF subunits are synthesized in cell bodies, extensive phosphorylation of the KSP repeats in tail domains of NF-M and NF-H occurs primarily in axons. The nature of this regulation, however, is not understood. As obligate heteropolymers, NF assembly requires interactions between the core NF-L with NF-M or NF-H subunits, a process inhibited by NF head domain phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of head domains at protein kinase A (PKA)-specific sites seems to occur transiently in cell bodies after NF subunit synthesis. We have proposed that transient phosphorylation of head domains prevents NF assembly in the soma and inhibits tail domain phosphorylation; i.e. assembly and KSP phosphorylation in axons depends on prior dephosphorylation of head domain sites. Deregulation of this process leads to pathological accumulations of phosphorylated NFs in the soma as seen in some neurodegenerative disorders. To test this hypothesis, we studied the effect of PKA phosphorylation of the NF-M head domain on phosphorylation of tail domain KSP sites. In rat cortical neurons we showed that head domain phosphorylation of endogenous NF-M by forskolin-activated PKA inhibits NF-M tail domain phosphorylation. To demonstrate the site specificity of PKA phosphorylation and its effect on tail domain phosphorylation, we transfected NIH3T3 cells with NF-M mutated at PKA-specific head domain serine residues. Epidermal growth factor stimulation of cells with mutant NF-M in the presence of forskolin exhibited no inhibition of NF-tail domain phosphorylation compared with the wild type NF-M-transfected cells. This is consistent with our hypothesis that transient phosphorylation of NF-M head domains inhibits tail domain phosphorylation and suggests this as one of several mechanisms underlying topographic regulation.  相似文献   

18.
2,5-Hexanedione (2,5-HD), the neurotoxic metabolite of n-hexane, can structurally modify neurofilaments (NF) by pyrrole adduct formation and subsequent covalent cross-linking. 2,5-HD also induces accumulations of NF within the pre-terminal axon. We examined whether exposure of NF to 2,5-HD affected NF degradation. Two different models were used: (1) NF-enriched cytoskeletons isolated from human sciatic nerve were incubated with 2,5-HD in vitro and (2) differentiated human neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-SH) were exposed to 2, 5-HD in culture prior to isolation of cytoskeletal proteins. The cytoskeletal preparations were subsequently incubated with calpain II. The amount of NF-H and NF-L remaining after proteolysis was determined by SDS-PAGE and quantitative immunoblotting. NF-M proteolysis could not be quantified. Incubation of sciatic nerve cytoskeletal preparations with 2,5-HD resulted in cross-linking of all three NF proteins into high molecular weight (HMW) material with a range of molecular weights. Proteolysis of the NF-H and NF-L polypeptides was not affected by 2,5-HD-exposure. Degradation of the HMW material containing NF-H or NF-L was retarded when comparing with degradation of the NF-H and NF-L polypeptides, respectively, from control samples, but not as compared to the corresponding NF polypeptides from 2,5-HD-treated samples. Exposure of SK-N-SH cells to 2,5-HD also resulted in considerable cross-linking of NF. No differences were found between the proteolytic rates of NF-L and NF-H from exposed cells as compared with those subunits from control cells. Moreover, degradation of cross-linked NF-H was not different from monomeric NF-H. In conclusion, whether 2,5-HD affects calpain-mediated degradation of cross-linked NF proteins will depend on which model better reflects NF cross-linking as occurring in 2, 5-HD-induced axonopathy. However, with both models it was demonstrated that exposure of NF proteins to 2,5-HD without subsequent cross-linking is not adequate to inhibit NF proteolysis in vitro by added calpain.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: A panel of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) was produced against mouse brain proteins that bind to the tail domain of the neurofilament (NF) heavy (200-kDa) subunit (NF-H) in vitro. An in vivo association of the MAb ligands with NFs was confirmed by examining reactivity of the MAbs with immunoprecipitated NF-H complexes. Using this method we demonstrated association of the ligands of three of the MAbs with NFs. In contrast, glial fibrillary acidic protein and an unknown 97-kDa brain protein were not associated with NFs by this criterion. An 80-kDa doublet that coimmunoprecipitated with NF-H complexes, recognized by MAb 223, was shown by immunocytochemistry and immunoblotting to be synapsin Ia and Ib. Using a complementary approach, we confirmed an association of synapsin with NFs by demonstrating that immunoprecipitated synapsin I complexes contained NF-H and NF medium (160-kDa) subunits. MAbs 63 and 105 recognized a more complex set of proteins that had predominantly synaptic localizations. These data suggest that NFs may provide important support for attachment and/or transport of synaptic proteins in brain.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1988,107(6):2689-2701
The 200-kD subunit of neurofilaments (NF-H) functions as a cross-bridge between neurofilaments and the neuronal cytoskeleton. In this study, four phosphorylated NF-H variants were identified as major constituents of axons from a single neuron type, the retinal ganglion cell, and were shown to have characteristics with different functional implications. We resolved four major Coomassie Blue-stained proteins with apparent molecular masses of 197, 200, 205, and 210 kD on high resolution one- dimensional SDS-polyacrylamide gels of mouse optic axons (optic nerve and optic tract). Proteins with the same electrophoretic mobilities were radiolabeled within retinal ganglion cells in vivo after injecting mice intravitreally with [35S]methionine or [3H]proline. Extraction of the radiolabeled protein fraction with 1% Triton X-100 distinguished four insoluble polypeptides (P197, P200, P205, P210) with expected characteristics of NF-H from two soluble neuronal polypeptides (S197, S200) with few properties of neurofilament proteins. The four Triton- insoluble polypeptides displayed greater than 90% structural homology by two-dimensional alpha-chymotryptic iodopeptide map analysis and cross-reacted with four different monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to NF-H by immunoblot analysis. Each of these four polypeptides advanced along axons primarily in the Group V (SCa) phase of axoplasmic transport. By contrast, the two Triton-soluble polypeptides displayed only a minor degree of alpha-chymotryptic peptide homology with the Triton-insoluble NF-H forms, did not cross-react with NF-H antibodies, and moved primarily in the Group IV (SCb) wave of axoplasmic transport. The four NF-H variants were generated by phosphorylation of a single polypeptide. Each of these polypeptides incorporated 32P when retinal ganglion cells were radiolabeled in vivo with [32P]orthophosphate and each cross-reacted with monoclonal antibodies specifically directed against phosphorylated epitopes on NF-H. When dephosphorylated in vitro with alkaline phosphatase, the four variants disappeared, giving rise to a single polypeptide with the same apparent molecular mass (160 kD) as newly synthesized, unmodified NF-H. The NF-H variants distributed differently along optic axons. P197 predominated at proximal axonal levels; P200 displayed a relatively uniform distribution; and P205 and P210 became increasingly prominent at more distal axonal levels, paralleling the distribution of the stationary neurofilament network.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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