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1.
The optic nerve, as a part of the central nervous system (CNS), has been used to study axonal transport for decades. The present study has concentrated on the axonal transport of synaptic vesicle proteins in the optic nerve, using the “stop-flow/nerve crush” method. After blocking fast axonal transport, distinct accumulations of synaptic vesicle proteins developed during the first hour after crush-operation and marked increases were observed up to 8 h postoperative. Semiquantitative analysis, using cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) of immunoincubated sections, revealed that the ratio between distal accumulations (organelles in retrograde transport) and proximal accumulations (organelles in anterograde transport) was much higher (up to 80–90%) for the transmembrane proteins than that for surface adsorbed proteins (only 10–20%). The pattern of axonal transport in the optic nerve was comparable to that in the sciatic nerve. However, clathrin and Rab3a immunoreactivities were accumulated in much lower amounts than that in the sciatic nerve. Most synaptic vesicle proteins were colocalized in the axons proximal to the crush. A differential distribution of synaptobrevin I and II, however, was observed in the optic nerve axons; synaptobrevin I was present in large-sized axons, while synaptobrevin II immunoreactivity was present in most axons, including the large ones. The two isoforms were, thus, partially colocalized. The results demonstrate that (1) cytofluorimetric scanning techniques could be successfully used to study axonal transport not only in peripheral nerves, but also in the CNS; (2) synaptic vesicles are transported with fast axonal transport in this nerve; and (3) some differences were noted compared with the sciatic nerve, especially for Rab3a and clathrin. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 32: 237–250, 1997.  相似文献   

2.
Dynein and kinesin have been implicated as the molecular motors that are responsible for the fast transport of axonal membranous organelles and vesicles. Experiments performed in vitro with partially reconstituted preparations have led to the hypothesis that kinesin moves organelles in the anterograde direction and dynein moves them in the retrograde direction. However, the molecular basis of transport directionality remains unclear. In the experiments described here, carboxylated fluorescent beads were injected into living Mauthner axons of lamprey and the beads were observed to move in both the anterograde and retrograde directions. The bead movement in both directions required intact microtubules, occurred at velocities approaching organelle fast transport in vivo, and was inhibited by vanadate at concentrations that inhibit organelle fast transport. When living axons were injected with micromolar concentrations of vanadate and irradiated at 365 nm prior to bead injections, a treatment that results in the V1 photolysis of dynein, the retrograde movement of the beads was specifically abolished. Neither the ultraviolet irradiation alone nor the vanadate alone produced the retrograde-specific inhibition. These results support the hypothesis that dynein is required for retrograde, but not anterograde, transport in vivo. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: Retrograde axonal transport of phospholipid was studied in rat sciatic motoneuron axons by placing collection crushes on the nerve at intervals after injection of [methyl-3H]choline into the lumbosacral spinal cord, and allowing labelled material undergoing anterograde or retrograde movement to accumulate adjacent to the collection crushes. Control experiments showed that the accumulations of label were not a result of local uptake of circulating precursor. The majority of the 3H label was associated with phosphatidylcholine. Accumulation of label at the distal collection crush, representing retrograde transport, was observed subsequent to the anterograde transport of phospholipid. In comparison with previous study on retrograde transport of protein, the following points were noted: (1) onset of retrograde transport occurred at approximately the same time after precursor injection (10–20 h) for both protein and phospholipid; (2) retrograde transport of lipids was more prolonged: maximum retrograde transport occurred later for phospholipid (30 h) than for protein (15–20 h), and declined to half-maximum between 49 and 99 h, compared to a corresponding value of 24–28 h for protein; (3) the proportion of total anterograde-transported activity subsequently undergoing retrograde transport was less in the case of phospholipid, at least over the time interval studied (up to 99 h after precursor injection). The similar times of onset of retrograde transport of phospholipid and protein support the concept of retrograde transport as a recycling mechanism returning to the cell body membrane fragments that were earlier transported into the axon. Coordinated retrograde transport of labelled protein and phospholipid components of the recycled membranes would be predicted. Differences between protein and phospholipid in the subsequent time course and amount of retrograde transport may reflect differences in axonal handling of protein and lipid. Both the more prolonged outflow of labelled lipids from cell body into axon and exchange with a distal pool of unlabelled phospholipid may account for the prolonged time course of retrograde transport of labelled lipid.  相似文献   

4.
T. Noguchi  H. Watanabe  R. Suzuki 《Protoplasma》1998,201(3-4):202-212
Summary The effects of brefeldin A (BFA) on the structure of the Golgi apparatus, the nuclear envelope, and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and on the thiamine pyrophosphatase (TPPase) activity in these organelles were examined in a green alga,Scenedesmus acutus, to obtain evidence for the existence of a retrograde transport from the Golgi apparatus to the ER via the nuclear envelope. InScenedesmus, Golgi bodies are situated close to the nuclear envelope throughout the cell cycle and receive the transition vesicles not directly from the ER, but from the nuclear envelope. BFA induced the disassembly of Golgi bodies and an increase in the ER cisternae at the trans-side of decomposed Golgi bodies in interphase cells and multinuclear cells before septum formation. The accumulated ER cisternae connected to the nuclear envelope at one part. TPPase activity was detected in all cisternae of Golgi bodies, but not in the nuclear envelope or the ER in nontreated cells. On the contrary, in BFA-treated cells, TPPase activity was detected in the nuclear envelope and the ER in addition to the decomposed Golgi bodies. When septum-forming cells were treated with BFA, the disassembly of Golgi bodies was less than that in interphase cells, and TPPase activity was detected in the Golgi cisternae but not in the nuclear envelope or the ER. These results suggest mat BFA blocks the anterograde transport from the nuclear envelope to the Golgi bodies but does not block the retrograde transport from the Golgi bodies to the nuclear envelope in interphase and multinuclear cells.Abbreviations BFA brefeldin A - ER endoplasmic reticulum - TPPase thiamine pyrophosphatase  相似文献   

5.
Reversal of axonal transport of endogenous labeled protein was studied in intact and injured nerve axons. Nerve crushes were used to collect labeled protein transported in anterograde and retrograde directions in rat sciatic nerve motoneuron axons after administration of L-[35S]methionine to the vicinity of the cell bodies. The collected proteins were characterized by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and subsequent fluorography. In injured nerves, where the nerves were ligated distally at the time of precursor injection, the polypeptide composition of proteins moving in anterograde and retrograde directions, 9-11 h after precursor injection, was identical, indicating that reversal at a ligature is a nonselective process. In intact nerves, protein moving in the anterograde direction 22-24 h after injection was different from that found 9-11 h after injection, and was also different from protein moving in the retrograde direction 22-24 h after injection. However, protein moving in the retrograde direction 22-24 h after injection was similar to protein moving in the anterograde direction 9-11 h after injection. Thus it appears that the same group of proteins originally transported into the axon are later returned toward the cell body. In intact axons, also, reversal was nonselective, except that one major labeled polypeptide was reduced in amount in the protein moving in the retrograde direction.  相似文献   

6.
Using immunofluorescence and cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS), we investigated the short-term (1-7 days) influence of lower thoracic spinal cord transection on lumbar motor neurons. The content of calcitonin gene-related peptide- (CGRP) like immunoreactivity (LI), chromogranin A (Chr A) -LI, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-LI, Syn I-LI, and synaptophysin (p38)-LI in motor perikarya, and the anterograde and retrograde axonal transport of these substances in the sciatic nerve, were studied in nerve crush (6 h) experiments. During the week after transection, CGRP-LI in perikarya decreased, whereas Chr A-LI increased. VIP-LI, co-localized with Chr A-LI in motor perikarya, did not change after transection. The antero- and retrograde transport of CGRP-LI in the sciatic nerve, occurring in both motor and sensory axons, appeared unchanged in cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) graphs, but the microscopical picture clearly showed that large motor axons had a decreased content of CGRP-LI at 3 and 7 days posttransection, whereas thinner axons were unchanged in fluorescence intensity. The anterograde transport of Chr A-LI, present in both motor and postganglionic adrenergic axons, was decreased 1 and 3 days after lesion, but returned to control by day 7. There was a marked decrease in anterograde transport of VIP-LI, present mainly in postganglionic sympathetic axons, at day 3, but at 7 days transport was normal. The amounts of transported p38, the synaptic vesicle marker, were in the normal range during the whole period. Syn I-LI accumulation anterogradely was somewhat decreased at 3 and 7 days posttransection, and at 1 day the retrograde accumulation was significantly increased. The results suggest that removal of supraspinal input to intact lower motor neurons causes alterations in metabolism and axonal transport of organelle-associated substances, partly probably related to the complex pattern of transmitter leakage from degenerating, descending nerve terminals. These alterations appear to take place also in postganglionic sympathetic neurons in the sciatic nerve, that originate in the lumbar sympathetic chain. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Rapid organelle transport was studied by computer- and video-enhanced microscopy in the region of localized lesions in single myelinated axons of Xenopus laevis. Localized lesions were created that were either impermeable to small ions in the bathing medium or were permeable to agents with molecular weights up to 10,000. Providing the axons were bathed in a suitable "internal" medium, organelle transport continued to within a few micrometers of the lesion whether the lesion was permeable or not. Organelles undergoing anterograde and retrograde transport reversed their direction of transport on reaching the lesion. In preparations with lesions that were permeable, nonhydrolyzable analogs of ATP inhibited normally directed and reversed organelle transport. In permeable preparations, vanadate and EDTA inhibited retrograde and reversed retrograde transport at different intra-axonal concentrations; anterograde and reversed anterograde transport were also differentially inhibited. Anterograde and retrograde organelle transport were also shown to be inhibited at different intraaxonal concentrations of vanadate and EDTA. The results provide evidence for the existence of two different axonal transport mechanisms in myelinated axons. The two mechanisms can account for the normally directed and reversed transport of individual organelles.  相似文献   

8.
The axonal transport of organelles is critical for the development, maintenance, and survival of neurons, and its dysfunction has been implicated in several neurodegenerative diseases. Retrograde axon transport is mediated by the motor protein dynein. In this study, using embryonic chicken dorsal root ganglion neurons, we investigate the effects of Ciliobrevin D, a pharmacological dynein inhibitor, on the transport of axonal organelles, axon extension, nerve growth factor (NGF)‐induced branching and growth cone expansion, and axon thinning in response to actin filament depolymerization. Live imaging of mitochondria, lysosomes, and Golgi‐derived vesicles in axons revealed that both the retrograde and anterograde transport of these organelles was inhibited by treatment with Ciliobrevin D. Treatment with Ciliobrevin D reversibly inhibits axon extension and transport, with effects detectable within the first 20 min of treatment. NGF induces growth cone expansion, axonal filopodia formation and branching. Ciliobrevin D prevented NGF‐induced formation of axonal filopodia and branching but not growth cone expansion. Finally, we report that the retrograde reorganization of the axonal cytoplasm which occurs on actin filament depolymerization is inhibited by treatment with Ciliobrevin D, indicating a role for microtubule based transport in this process, as well as Ciliobrevin D accelerating Wallerian degeneration. This study identifies Ciliobrevin D as an inhibitor of the bidirectional transport of multiple axonal organelles, indicating this drug may be a valuable tool for both the study of dynein function and a first pass analysis of the role of axonal transport. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 75: 757–777, 2015  相似文献   

9.
beta,beta'-Iminodipropionitrile (IDPN), a neurotoxin, causes redistribution of neurofilaments in axons followed by the development of proximal axonal swellings and, in chronic intoxication, a distal decrease in axonal caliber. The latter changes are caused by a selective impairment in the slow anterograde axonal transport of neurofilament proteins. To assess the role of retrograde axonal transport in IDPN toxicity, we used [3H]N-succinimidyl propionate ([3H]NSP) to label covalently endogenous axonal proteins in sciatic nerve of the rat and measured the accumulation of radioactively labeled proteins in the cell bodies of motor and sensory neurons over time. IDPN was injected intraneurally 6 h or intraperitoneally 1 day before subepineurial injection of [3H]NSP into the sciatic nerve, and the animals were killed 1, 2, and 7 days after [3H]NSP injection. Neurotoxicity was assessed by electron microscopic observation of the nerves of similarly treated animals. Both intraneural and intraperitoneal injection of IDPN caused an acute reduction in the amount of labeled proteins transported back to the cell bodies. The early appearance of these changes suggests that alterations in retrograde transport may play a role in the production of the neuropathic changes.  相似文献   

10.
Video-enhanced contrast techniques have been used to study fast axonal transport of organelles in diseased and normal human axons. A broad perspective on the importance of axonal transport in the pathogenesis of human neurological disorders is presented and problems in dealing with human nerve summarized. Results from analysis of organelle traffic in axons from motor nerve in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) show: 1) higher mean speed of anterograde organelles, 2) lower mean speed of retrograde organelles, and 3) lower retrograde organelle traffic density. Hyperparathyroidism, another human clinical syndrome, can mimic ALS. The effect of parathyroid hormone (PTH) on axons in vitro is to increase the mean speed of both anterograde and retrograde organelle traffic. The dose response curve and time course of the PTH effect are delineated. Dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonists block the PTH effect, implicating extracellular calcium in the alteration of organelle traffic speed. The results are discussed in relation to neuronal function and the regulation of fast axonal transport.  相似文献   

11.
Acrylamide is a neurotoxin known to impair regeneration of axons following nerve crush and to produce structurally abnormal regenerating sprouts. To investigate the mechanism of these abnormalities, protein synthesis and fast axonal transport were studied in acrylamide-intoxicated and control rats 2 weeks after sciatic nerve crush. Using an in vitro preparation of sciatic nerve-dorsal root ganglion, there was no difference in ganglion 3H-leucine incorporation between the two groups. In these preparations of sensory axons, as well as in motor axons studied in vivo, a smaller proportion of rapidly transported radioactivity was carried beyond the crush in the acrylamide-regenerating nerves compared to the control-regenerating nerves. Correlative ultrastructural studies demonstrated that this difference reflected the impaired outgrowth of the acrylamide-regenerating nerves, rather than an abnormality in fast transport. The acrylamide-treated sprouts often developed swellings filled with whorls of neurofilaments; in addition, many sprouts ended in massively enlarged growth cones containing membranous organelles. EM autoradiography showed labeled, rapidly transported organelles accumulated in the neurofilamentous whorls, and therefore suggested that these organelles might be “trapped” or impeded in passage through these regions. However, there was no evidence that the growth cones received insufficient amounts of transported protein; in fact, the distended endings were densely labeled and apparently “ballooned” by transported organelles. These results suggest that acrylamide intoxication does not impair regeneration by diminishing the delivery of rapidly transported materials to the growing tip. Rather, the marked distention of the growth cones is interpreted as the morphological consequence of continued delivery of rapidly transported organelles into sprouts unable to utilize them in outgrowth.  相似文献   

12.
Axonal transport is critical for neuronal function and survival. Cytoplasmic dynein and its accessory complex dynactin form a microtubule minus end-directed motor in charge of retrograde transport. In this study, we show that Nudel, a dynein regulator, was highly expressed in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. Microinjection of anti-Nudel antibody into cultured DRG neurons abolished retrograde transport of membranous organelles in the axon and led to dispersions of Golgi cisternae in the soma. As a result, lysosomes, which are normally enriched in the soma, moved persistently into and thus accumulated in axons. Endo-lysosome formation was also markedly delayed. As anterograde motility of mitochondria was not inhibited, the antibody apparently did not abolish retrograde transport by destructing axonal microtubule tracks. Similar results were obtained by microinjecting N-terminal Nudel, anti-dynein antibody or a p150Glued mutant capable of abrogating the dynein–dynactin association. These results indicate a critical role of Nudel in dynein-mediated axonal transport. Moreover, the effects of dynein on endolysosome formation and regional sequestration of lysosomes may contribute to defects in the endocytic pathway seen in neurons of patients or animals with malfunction of dynein.  相似文献   

13.
Using immunofluorescence and cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS), we investigated the short-term (1-7 days) influence of lower thoracic spinal cord transection on lumbar motor neurons. The content of calcitonin gene-related peptide- (CGRP) like immunoreactivity (LI), chromogranin A (Chr A)-LI, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-LI, Syn I-LI, and synaptophysin (p38)-LI in motor perikarya, and the anterograde and retrograde axonal transport of these substances in the sciatic nerve, were studied in nerve crush (6 h) experiments. During the week after transection, CGRP-LI in perikarya decreased, whereas Chr A-LI increased. VIP-LI, co-localized with Chr A-LI in motor perikarya, did not change after transection. The antero- and retrograde transport of CGRP-LI in the sciatic nerve, occurring in both motor and sensory axons, appeared unchanged in cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) graphs, but the microscopical picture clearly showed that large motor axons had a decreased content of CGRP-LI at 3 and 7 days posttransection, whereas thinner axons were unchanged in fluorescence intensity. The anterograde transport of Chr A-LI, present in both motor and postganglionic adrenergic axons, was decreased 1 and 3 days after lesion, but returned to control by day 7. There was a marked decrease in anterograde transport of VIP-LI, present mainly in postganglionic sympathetic axons, at day 3, but at 7 days transport was normal. The amounts of transported p38, the synaptic vesicle marker, were in the normal range during the whole period. Syn I-LI accumulation anterogradely was somewhat decreased at 3 and 7 days posttransection, and at 1 day the retrograde accumulation was significantly increased. The results suggest that removal of supraspinal input to intact lower motor neurons causes alterations in metabolism and axonal transport of organelle-associated substances, partly probably related to the complex pattern of transmitter leakage from degenerating, descending nerve terminals. These alterations appear to take place also in postganglionic sympathetic neurons in the sciatic nerve, that originate in the lumbar sympathetic chain.  相似文献   

14.
The sciatic nerve, as a part of the peripheral nervous system (PNS), has been used to study axonal transport for decades. It contains motor, sensory as well as autonomic axons. The present study has concentrated on the axonal transport of the synaptic vesicle acetylcholine transporter (VAChT), using the "stop–flow\erve crush” method. After blocking fast axonal transport by means of a crush, distinct accumulations of various synaptic vesicle proteins, including VAChT, and peptides developed during the first hour after crush–operation and marked increases were observed up to 8 h post–operative. Semiquantitative analysis, using cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) of immuno–incubated sections, revealed a rapid rate of accumulation proximal to the crush, and that the ratio between distal accumulations (organelles in retrograde transport) and proximal accumulations (organelles in anterograde transport) was about 40%. Most synaptic vesicle proteins were colocalized in the axons proximal to the crush. VAChT–immu–noreactive axons were also immunoreactive for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). Autonomic axons with VAChT also contained VIP–LI.

The results demonstrate (1) that VAChT, as well as other synaptic vesicle proteins, is transported with fast axonal transport in motor axons as well as in autonomic post–ganglionic neurons in this nerve, (2) VAChT colocalized in motor axons with SV1 as well as with synaptophysin, indicating storage in the same axonal particle, (3) in the autonomic postganglionic sympathetic cholinergic fibres, VAChT colocalized with VIP, but VIP–LI was present in rather large granular structures while VAChT–LI was present mostly as small granular elements, (4) in motor as well as in autonomic axons ChAT–LI was present in VAChT–positive axons, and (4) the ratio of recycling (retrogradely accumulated) VAChT–IR was about 40%, in contrast to the recycling fraction of synaptophysin that was about 70%. © 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.  相似文献   


15.
Although autoradiography has demonstrated local incorporation of [3H]inositol into axonal phospholipids after intraneural injection, retrograde axonal transport of phosphatidylinositol has only been demonstrated after injection of lipid precursor into the cell body regions (L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia) of the sciatic nerve. We now report the retrograde axonal transport of inositol phospholipids synthesized locally in the axons. Following microinjection of myo-[3H]inositol into the rat sciatic nerve (50-55 mm distal to L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia), a time-dependent accumulation of 3H label occurred in the dorsal root ganglia ipsilateral to the injection site. The ratio of dpm present in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia to that in the contralateral dorsal root ganglia was not significantly different from unity between 2 and 8 h following isotope injection but increased to 10-12-fold between 24 and 72 h following precursor injection. By 24 h following precursor injection, the ipsilateral/contralateral ratio of the water-soluble label in the dorsal root ganglia still remained approximately 1.0, whereas the corresponding ratio in the chloroform/methanol-soluble fraction was approximately 20. The time course of appearance of labeled lipids in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia after injection of precursor into the nerve at various distances from the dorsal root ganglia indicated a transport rate of at least 5 mm/h. Accumulation of label in the dorsal root ganglia could be prevented by intraneural injection of colchicine or ligation of the sciatic nerve between the dorsal root ganglia and the isotope injection site. These results demonstrate that inositol phospholipids synthesized locally in the sciatic nerve are retrogradely transported back to the nerve cell bodies located in the dorsal root ganglia.  相似文献   

16.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to characterize labeled proteins transported in rat motor and sensory axons after application of 3H-leucine to the neuron cell bodies. Two types of experiments were performed: first, transported protein accumulating proximal to a ligature placed on the sciatic nerve was analyzed; second, the segment of sciatic nerve nearest to the "wavecrest" of transported protein travelling down the nerve was analyzed. In both cases, no significant differences in peak position or amplitude were found in gels containing labeled proteins from motor or sensory axons. This may mean that the majority of fast-transported protein is involved in an axonal function common to the two types of neuron.  相似文献   

17.
Reversal of axonal transport at a nerve crush.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Abstract— —We have compared retrograde axonal transport of 3H-labeled protein in normal rat motor and sensory axons, and axons which were injured by a distal ligation of the sciatic nerve. After injection of L-[3H]leucine into the vicinity of the neuron cell bodies, labeled protein was transported into the axons. A premature return of protein towards the cell bodies occurred in the injured axons, which we interpret as a reversal of axonal transport occurring at the site of injury. We estimate that reversal of transport occurred within 1.9–2.4 h of the arrival of labeled protein at the injury, and that the minimum velocity of the subsequent retrograde transport was 112–133 mm day?1. The ability of the injured axons to reverse transport developed about 0.8 h after making the injury. A large fraction of the orthograde transported protein was returned towards the cell body: it is estimated that by 28 h after labeled protein in sensory axons reached the injury, 46% of the3H-labeled protein originally transported to the injury site had been returned. In intact sensory nerves at this time only 15% of the transported protein had returned. It is suggested that axonal injury produces a sudden increase in the return of newly synthesized protein to the cell body, and that this might serve as a signal for chromatolysis.  相似文献   

18.
The possibility that the amount of newly synthesized material made available for fast axonal transport is regulated by nerve impulse activity was examined in an in vitro preparation of bullfrog dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and sciatic nerve. Under conditions that precluded effects of impulse activity on either uptake or incorporation of precursor, patterned stimulation of the sciatic nerve (1 out of every 2 s) produced a frequency- and time-dependent decrease in the amount of radiolabeled protein accumulating at a nerve ligature. The response to patterned stimulation was significantly greater than that to continuous stimulation when the same number of stimuli were delivered. In unligated nerve preparations, patterned stimulation decreased the amplitude of the transport profile with no concomitant change in the wave front distance. Nerve stimulation produced no observable ultrastructural alterations within neuronal cell bodies of the DRG. We propose that the physiological significance of these results is not that nerve impulse activity decreases fast axonal transport, but that the amount of transport increases during periods of electrical quiescence. According to this hypothesis, activity-dependent macromolecules of the axolemma and nerve terminals are replenished during periods when the neuron is firing less frequently. These findings are discussed in light of reports that chronic in vivo stimulation increases the amount of fast-transported, radiolabeled protein (Chan et al., 1989) and that TTX-blockade of neuronal activity has no effect on protein transport (Edwards and Grafstein, 1984; Riccio and Matthews, 1985).  相似文献   

19.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to characterize labeled proteins transported in rat motor and sensory axons after application of 3H-leucine to the neuron cell bodies. Two types of experiments were performed: first, transported protein accumulating proximal to a ligature placed on the sciatic nerve was analyzed; second, the segment of sciatic nerve nearest to the “lwavecrest” of transported protein travelling down the nerve was analyzed. In both cases, no significant differences in peak position or amplitude were found in gels containing labeled proteins from motor or sensory axons. This may mean that the majority of fast-transported protein is involved in an axonal function common to the two types of neuron.  相似文献   

20.
The Golgi complex functions in transport of molecules from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the plasma membrane and other distal organelles as well as in retrograde transport to the ER. The fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA) promotes dissociation of ADP-ribosylation-factor-1 (ARF1) and the coatomer protein complex-I (COP-I) from Golgi membranes, followed by Golgi tubulation and fusion with the ER. Here we demonstrate that the cationic ionophore monensin inhibited the BFA-mediated Golgi redistribution to the ER without interfering with ARF1 and COP-I dissociation. Preservation of a perinuclear Golgi despite COP-I and ARF1 dissociation enables addressing the involvement of these proteins in anterograde ER to Golgi transport. The thermo-reversible folding mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (VSVGtsO45) was retained in the ER in the presence of both monensin and BFA, thus supporting ARF1/COP-I participation in ER-exit processes. Live-cell imaging revealed that BFA-induced Golgi tubulation persisted longer in the presence of monensin, suggesting that monensin inhibits tubule fusion with the ER. Moreover, monensin also augmented Golgi-derived tubules that contained the ER-Golgi-intermediate compartment marker, p58, in the absence of BFA, signifying the generality of this effect. Taken together, we propose that monensin inhibits membrane fusion processes in the presence or absence of BFA.  相似文献   

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