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1.
The squid giant axon and extruded axoplasm from the giant axon were used to study the capacity of axoplasm for phospholipid synthesis. Extruded axoplasm, suspended in chemically defined media, catalyzed the synthesis of phospholipids from all of the precursors tested. 32P-Labeled inorganic phosphate and gamma-labeled ATP were actively incorporated into phosphatidylinositol phosphate, while [2-3H]myo-inositol and L-[3H(G)]serine were actively incorporated into phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine, respectively. Though less well utilized. [2-3H]glycerol was incorporated into phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylinositol, and triglyceride, and methyl-3H]choline and [1-3H]ethanolamine were incorporated into phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine, respectively. Isolated squid giant axons were incubated in artificial seawater containing the above precursors. The axoplasm was extruded following the incubations. Although most of the product lipids were recovered in the sheath (composed of cortical axoplasm, axolemma, and surrounding satellite cells), significant amounts (4-20%) were present in the extruded axoplasm. With tritiated choline and myo-inositol, the major labeled phospholipids found in both the extruded axoplasm and the sheath were phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylinositol, respectively. With both glycerol and phosphate, phosphatidylethanolamine was a major labeled lipid in both axoplasm and sheath. These findings demonstrate that all classes of phospholipids are formed by endogenous synthetic enzymes in axoplasm. In addition, we feel that the different patterns of incorporation by intact axons and extruded axoplasm indicate that surrounding sheath cells contribute lipids to axoplasm. A comprehensive picture of axonal lipid metabolism should include axoplasmic synthesis and glial-axon transfer as pathways complementing the axonal transport of perikaryally formed lipids.  相似文献   

2.
Using a spin-echo technique, the spin-lattice and spin-spin relaxation times (T1 and T2) of water protons in a single nerve fiber (giant axon of squid) were determined. Similar measurements were also carried out on axoplasm extruded from these nerve fibers. It was found that the relaxation times of water protons of both the intact fiber and the extruded axoplasm are approximately equal (and much less than those of a free solution), suggesting that the relaxation times of cellular water are shortened mainly by water-protein interactions rather than by water-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

3.
Previous work has revealed that 4S RNA is the primary species of RNA in the axoplasm from the giant axons of the squid and Myxicola. This study shows that axoplasmic 4S RNA from the squid giant axon has the functional properties of tRNA. Axoplasmic RNA was charged with amino acids by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases prepared from squid brain. The aminoacylation was prevented by incubating the RNA with RNase prior to running the reaction. The amino acid-RNA complex was labile at pH 9, which is characteristic of the acyl linkage between an amino acid and its tRNA. Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activity was also present in the axoplasm, primarily in the soluble fraction.  相似文献   

4.
Axoplasm extruded from the giant axon of the squid contains Ca2+-activated proteases. The protease in the 100,000X g of supernatant of axoplasm is very specific and degrades only the 200,000 MW, neurofilament protein (NF200), whereas the protease(s) in the pellet has a much wider range of substrate specificity. The activation of the supernatant protease is restricted to the Ca2+ ion, and no other divalent cation will substitute. The protease requires Ca2+ at a higher concentration than 0.5 mM for activation, and has a pH optimum of about 7.5. Degradation of the NF200 appears to proceed through a 100,000 MW and possibly a 47,000–50,000-MW intermediate form before degradation to TCA-soluble peptides. Activity of the protease is inhibited by divalent cation chelators, Cu2+ and Fe2+, sulphydryl inhibitors, and leupeptin. This specific Ca2+-activated protease in squid axoplasm has identical properties to Ca2+-activated proteases found in various non-neural tissues. Despite its narrow protein substrate specificity, Ca2+-activated protease purified from human platelets effectively degrades squid NF200, suggesting a possible structural relationship between platelet and muscle actin-binding proteins and neurofilament proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The contribution of the neurofilamentous network to the structure of the squid giant axon was analyzed electron-microscopically. Axial 10-nm filaments cross-linked by radial 5-nm bridges form a network that is present in preparations prepared by a variety of techniques. The axoplasm is differentiated into dense and less dense regions. In the presence of Co(II) ions, the neurofilamentous network was remarkably well preserved and appeared to be associated with a dense web of fine filament matrix, which also was identified in extracted axoplasm and in fractions enriched with neurofilament protein complex. In the presence of La(III) ions, the neurofilamentous network had a coarse and open appearance. The stereo images of extracted and critical-point dried axoplasm suggested that the neurofilamentous network contains ordered lattice-like regions. Extracted preparations of extruded axoplasm and fractions enriched with neurofilament protein complex suggested that the properties of the network are determined by the neurofilament protein complex. It is proposed that the neurofilamentous network is the essential determinant of the form of the axon, and that the order within the network is determined by the radial components of the network. The structures observed in the different preparations are not artifacts, but rather are related closely to their native state in the axon.  相似文献   

6.
To assay the detailed structural relationship between axonally transported vesicles and their substrate microtubules, vesicle transport was focally cold blocked in axoplasm that was extruded from the squid giant axon. A brief localized cold block concentrated anterogradely and retrogradely transported vesicles selectively on either the proximal or or distal side of the block. Normal movement of the concentrated vesicles was reactivated by rewarming the cold-blocked axoplasm. At the periphery of the axoplasm, moving vesicles were located on individual microtubules that had become separated from the other cytomatrix components. The presence of moving vesicles on isolated microtubules permitted the identification of the structural components required for vesicle transport along microtubules. The results show that 16-18-nm cross-bridges connect both anterogradely and retrogradely moving vesicles to their substrate microtubules. These observations demonstrate that cross-bridges are fundamental are fundamental components of vesicle transport along axonal microtubules. Thus, vesicle transport can now be included among those cell motile systems such as muscle and axonemes that are based on a cross-bridge-mediated mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Intracellular potassium activity, (aK)i, and axoplasmic K+ concentration, [K+]i, were measured by means of K+-selective microelectrodes and atomic absorption spectroscopy, respectively, in squid giant axons dialyzed with K+-free dialysis solution and bathed in K+-free artificial sea water. (aK)i measurements indicated that axoplasmic free K+ could be depleted by dialysis, whereas [K+]i measurements on axoplasm extruded from these axons suggest substantial retention of K+ (15.5 +/- 1.7 mmol/kg axoplasm K+; n = 9). In comparison, [K+]i in axoplasm extruded from freshly dissected axons was 330 +/- 16 mmol/kg axoplasm (n = 6). These data suggest that approximately 5% of the axoplasmic K+ ions are not easily removed by dialysis and that these ions are either bound to macromolecular sites or sequestered into membrane-enclosed organelles.  相似文献   

8.
The flow properties of axoplasm have been studied in a defined chemical environment. Axoplasm extruded from squid giant axons was introduced into porous cellulose acetate tubes of diameter roughly equal to that of the original axon. Passage of axoplasm along the tube rapidly coated the tube walls with a layer of protein. By measuring the rate of low back and forth along the tube, the rheological properties of the axoplasm plug were investigated at a range of pressures and in a variety of media. Axoplasm behaves as a classical Bingham body the motion of which can be characterized by a yield stress (theta) and a plastic viscosity (eta p). In a potassium methanesulphonate medium containing 65 nM free Ca2+, theta averaged 109 +/- 46 dyn/cm2 and eta p1 146 +/- 83 P. These values were little affected by ATP, COLCHICINE, CYTOCHOLASIN B or by replacing K by Na but were sensitive to the anion composition of the medium. The effectiveness of different anions at reducing theta and eta p1 was in the order SCN greater than I greater then Br greater than Cl greater than methanesulphonate. Theta and eta p1 were also drastically reduced by increasing the ionized Ca. This effect required millimolar amounts of Ca, was unaffected by the presence of ATP and was irreversible. It could be blocked by the protease inhibitor TLCK. E.p.r. measurements showed that within the matrix of the axoplasm gel there is a watery space that is largely unaffected by anions or calcium.  相似文献   

9.
Proteins in the squid giant axon were labeled with 32P by in vitro incubation of isolated axoplasm with radioactive [γ-32P]adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and separated by polyacrylamide sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The two major phosphorylated regions on the gel had molecular weights of 400 000 and 200 000. These two peaks appear to be neurofilament proteins of squid axoplasm. The same set of proteins was phosphorylated in the axoplasm regardless of whether the [γ-32P]ATP was applied in situ intracellularly or extracelarly. These results suggest that ATP in the extracellular space is, by some ATP-translocation mechanism, utilized in the process of intracellular phosphorylation. Measurements of the apparent influx of ATP across the squid axon membrane yielded results consistent with the view that ATP in the extracellular fluid could be transported into the axoplasm.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: Acetyltransferase enzymatic activity was detected and measured in homogenates obtained from intact nerve fibers and their separate cellular components, in the tropical squid Sepioteuthis sepioidea. The levels of acetylcholine synthesis were determined in pooled samples of whole stellar nerve, intact giant nerve fiber, extruded axoplasm, axoplasm-free giant nerve fiber sheaths, and small nerve fibers. The values found per mg of protein for the axoplasm-free sheaths are about 3–9 times those of the extruded axoplasm, and comparable to those found for the intact giant nerve fiber. These experimental findings settle the question of whether the Schwann cells of the giant nerve fiber of S. sepioidea , under physiological conditions, contain acetyltransferase activity and are able to synthesize acetylcholine.  相似文献   

11.
Translocation of intracellular organelles requires interaction with the cellular cytoskeleton, but the membrane and cytoskeletal proteins involved in movement are unknown. Here we show that highly purified synaptic vesicles from electric fish added to extruded squid axoplasm can show ATP-dependent movement. The movement is indistinguishable from that of endogenous vesicles and has a slight preference for the orthograde direction. In the presence of a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, the synaptic vesicles bind to axoplasmic fibers but do not move. Elastase treatment of vesicles inhibits both binding and movement. We conclude that a protein component on the surface of cholinergic synaptic vesicles from electric fish is conserved during evolution and so can be recognized by the organelle-translocating machinery of the squid axon, resulting in ATP-dependent movement. Synaptic vesicles apparently retain the capacity for fast axonal transport, even after they reach their intracellular destination.  相似文献   

12.
The phosphorylation activity associated with a neurofilament-enriched cytoskeletal preparation isolated from the squid giant axon has been studied and compared to the phosphorylation activities in intact squid axoplasm. The high molecular weight (greater than 300 kDa) and 220-kDa neurofilament proteins are the major endogenous substrates for the kinases in the axoplasm and the neurofilament preparation, whereas 95- and less than 60-kDa proteins are the major phosphoproteins in the ganglion cell preparation. The squid axon neurofilament (SANF) protein kinase activity appeared to be both cAMP and Ca2+ independent and could phosphorylate both casein (Km = 40 microM) and histone (Km = 180 microM). The SANF protein kinase could utilize either ATP or GTP in the phosphotransferase reaction, with a Km for ATP of 58 microM and 129.4 microM for GTP when casein was used as the exogenous substrate; and 25 and 98.1 microM for ATP and GTP, respectively, when the endogenous neurofilament proteins were used as substrates. The SANF protein kinase activity was only slightly inhibited by 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and various polyamines at high concentrations and was poorly inhibited by heparin (34% inhibition at 100 micrograms/ml). The failures of heparin to significantly inhibit and the polyamines to stimulate the SANF protein kinase indicate that it is not a casein type II kinase. The relative efficacy of GTP as a phosphate donor indicates that SANF protein kinase differs from known casein type I kinases. Phosphorylated (32P-labeled) neurofilament proteins were only slightly dephosphorylated in the presence of axoplasm or stellate ganglion cell supernatants, and the neurofilament-enriched preparation did not dephosphorylate 32P-labeled neurofilament proteins. The axoplasm and neurofilament preparations had no detectable protein kinase inhibitor activity, but a strong inhibitor activity, which was not dialyzable but was heat inactivatable, was found in ganglion cells. This inhibitor activity may account for the low phosphorylation activity found in the stellate ganglion cells and may indicate inhibitory regulation of SANF protein kinase activity in the ganglion cell bodies.  相似文献   

13.
A CALCIUM ACTIVATED PROTEASE IN SQUID AXOPLASM   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3  
Evidence for a protease in squid axoplasm which is selectively activated by Ca2+ and blocked by SH-inhibitors is presented. This protease appears to be particularly effective in degrading squid neurofilament proteins, but also extensively degrades various other major protein components in axoplasm.  相似文献   

14.
Although the transfer of glial proteins into the squid giant axon is well documented, the mechanism of the transfer remains unknown. We examined the possibility that the transfer involved membrane-bound vesicles, by taking advantage of the fact that the fluorescent compound, 3,6-acridinediamine, N,N,N,',N'-tetramethylmonohydride [acridine orange (AO)], rapidly and selectively stains vesicular structures in glial cells surrounding the giant axon. We labeled cleaned axons (1–3 cm long) by incubation for 1 min in filtered seawater (FSW) containing AO. Because the AO was concentrated in glial vesicular organelles, these fluoresced bright orange when the axon was examined by epifluorescence microscopy. To look for vesicle transfer, axoplasm was extruded from such AO-treated axons at various times after labeling. During the initial 15 min, an increasing number of fluorescent vesicles were observed. No further increases were observed between 15 and 60 min post AO. The transfer of the fluorescent vesicles into the axoplasm seemed to be energy dependent, as it was inhibited in axons treated with 2 mM KCN. These results suggest that a special mode of exchange exists between the adaxonal glia and the axon, perhaps involving phagocytosis by the axon of small portions of the glial cells.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution and length of actin microfilaments (MF) was determined in axoplasm extruded from the giant axons of the squid (Loligo pealeii). Extruded axoplasm that was separated from the axonal cortex contains approximately 92% of the total axonal actin, and 60% of this actin is polymerized (Morris, J., and R. Lasek. 1984. J. Cell Biol. 98:2064-2076). Localization of MF with rhodamine-phalloidin indicated that the MF were organized in fine columns oriented longitudinally within the axoplasm. In the electron microscope, MF were surrounded by a dense matrix and they were associated with the microtubule domains of the axoplasm. The surrounding matrix tended to obscure the MF which may explain why MF have rarely been recognized before in the inner regions of the axon. The axoplasmic MF are relatively short (number average length of 0.55 micron). Length measurements of MF prepared either in the presence or absence of the actin-filament stabilizing drug phalloidin indicate that axoplasm contains two populations of MF: stable MF (number average length of 0.79 micron) and metastable MF (number average length of 0.41 micron). Although individual axonal MF are much shorter than axonal microtubules, the combined length of the total MF is twice that of the total microtubules. Apparently, these numerous short MF have an important structural role in the architecture of the inner axonal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

16.
The monomer-polymer equilibria for tubulin and actin were analyzed for the cytoskeleton of the squid giant axon. Two methods were evaluated for measuring the concentrations of monomer, soluble (equilibrium) polymer, and stable polymer in extruded axoplasm. One method, the Kinetic Equilibration Paradigm ( KEP ), employs the basic principles of diffusion to distinguish freely diffusible monomer from proteins that are present in the form of polymer. The other method is pharmacological and employs either taxol or phalloidin to stabilize the microtubules and microfilaments, respectively. The results of the two methods agree and demonstrate that 22-36% of the tubulin and 41-47% of the actin are monomeric. The in vivo concentration of monomeric actin and tubulin were two to three times higher than the concentration required to polymerize these proteins in vitro, suggesting that assembly of these proteins is regulated by additional mechanisms in the axon. A significant fraction of the polymerized actin and tubulin in the axoplasm was stable microtubules and microfilaments, which suggests that the dissociation reaction is blocked at both ends of these polymers. These results are discussed in relationship to the axonal transport of the cytoskeleton and with regard to the ability of axons to change their shape in response to environmental stimuli.  相似文献   

17.
A reconstituted model was devised to study the mechanisms of fast axonal transport in the squid Loligo pealei. Axonal vesicles were isolated from axoplasm of the giant axon and labeled with rhodamine-conjugated octadecanol, a membrane-specific fluorescent probe. The labeled vesicles were then injected into a fresh preparation of extruded axoplasm in which endogenous vesicle transport was occurring normally. The movement of the fluorescent, exogenous vesicles was observed by epifluorescence microscopy for as long as 5 min without significant photobleaching, and the transport of endogenous, nonfluorescent vesicles was monitored by video-enhanced differential interference-contrast microscopy. The transport of fluorescent, exogenous vesicles was shown to be bidirectional and ATP-dependent and occurred at a mean rate of 6.98 +/- 4.11 micron/s (mean +/- standard deviation, n = 41). In comparison, the mean rate of transport of nonfluorescent, endogenous vesicles in control axoplasm treated with vesicle buffer alone was 4.76 +/- 1.60 micron/s (n = 64). These rates are slightly higher than the mean rate of endogenous vesicle movement in extruded axoplasm (3.56 +/- 1.05 micron/s, n = 40) not subject to vesicles or vesicle buffer. Not all vesicles and organelles, exogenous or endogenous, were observed to move. In experiments in which proteins of the surface of the fluorescent vesicles were digested with trypsin before injection, no movement of the fluorescent vesicles was observed, although the transport of endogenous vesicles and organelles appeared to proceed normally. The results summarized above indicate that isolated vesicles, incorporated into axoplasm, move with the characteristics of fast axonal transport. Because the vesicles are fluorescent, they can be readily distinguished from nonfluorescent, endogenous vesicles. Moreover, this system permits vesicle characteristics to be experimentally manipulated, and therefore may prove valuable for the elucidation of the mechanisms of fast axonal transport.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanisms and pathways of synthesis of phosphatidylcholine in the giant fibre system of the squid (Loligo vulgaris) have been examined by incubating the stellate ganglion-nerve preparation or its separated compartments in an artificial bathing solution with labelled choline. Other experiments were done by dissecting the whole stellate ganglion into axoplasm, axon sheath, giant fibre lobe, small fibres and ganglion residue, after incubation. The initial rate of choline incorporation into choline phosphoglycerides was severalfold higher in the lobe than in the axon. Higher lipid radioactivity was recovered in the axon sheath as compared to the axoplasm, and in the small fibres as compared to the ganglion residue which contains its cell bodies. The production of phosphorylcholine and CDP-choline in the intact ganglion-nerve preparation during incubation with choline points to the occurrence of the net synthesis pathway for phosphatidylcholine in this material. Base-exchange activity was also observed in the axon and giant fibre lobe preparations in vitro, but no indication can yet be given whether it also takes place in intact preparations. Electrical stimulation and‘depolarizing’conditions enhance choline phosphorylation in the squid axon and lobe, but decrease phosphatidylcholine labelling.  相似文献   

19.
—Levorphanol (10-3 M) reversibly blocked conduction in the giant axon of the squid and axons from the walking legs of spider crab and lobster. Similar concentrations of levallorphan and dextrorphan blocked conduction in the squid giant axon. Under the same experimental condition morphine caused an approximately 40 per cent decrease in spike height. Levorphanol did not affect the resting potential or resistance of the squid axon. Spermidine, spermine and dinitrophenol had little or no direct effect on the action potential nor did they alter the potency of levorphanol. Concentrations of levorphanol as low as 5 × 10-5 M blocked repetitive or spontaneous activity in the squid axon induced by decreasing the divalent cations in the medium. After exposure to tritiated levorphanol, the axoplasm and envelope of the squid axon accumulated up to 500 per cent of the concentration of tritium found in the external medium, dependent on time of exposure, and other variables. At pH 6 the levels of penetration were 33-50% of those found at pH 8, which correlates with our observation that levorphanol is about 33 % as potent in blocking the action potential at pH 6. The penetrability of levorphanol was not affected by spermidine, dinitrophenol or cottonmouth moccasin venom. Levorphanol did not alter the penetration of [C14]acetylcholine nor did it render the squid axon sensitive to it. The block of axonal conduction by compounds of the morphine series is discussed both as to possible mechanisms and significance.  相似文献   

20.
A paper by DeGiorgis et al. (DeGiorgis JA, Petukhova TA, Evans TA, Reese TS. Kinesin-3 is an organelle motor in the squid giant axon. Traffic 2008; DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0854.2008.00809.x) in this issue of Traffic reports on the identification and function of a second squid kinesin, a kinesin-3 motor. As expected, the newly discovered motor associates with axoplasmic organelles in situ and powers motility along microtubules of vesicles isolated from squid axoplasm. Less expected was the finding that kinesin-3 may be the predominant motor for anterograde organelle movement in the squid axon, which challenges the so far undisputed view that this function is fulfilled by the conventional kinesin, kinesin-1. These novel findings let us wonder what the real function of kinesin-1--the most abundant motor in squid axons--actually is.  相似文献   

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