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1.
The distribution of the proteins migrating with the slow components a (SCa) and b (SCb) of axonal transport were studied in cross-sections of axons with electron microscope autoradiography. Radiolabeled amino acids were injected into the hypoglossal nucleus of rabbits and after 15 d, the animals were killed. Hypoglossal nerves were processed either for SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis fluorography to identify and locate the two components of slow transport, or for quantitative electron microscope autoradiography. Proteins transported in SCa were found to be uniformly distributed within the cross-section of the axon. Labeled SCb proteins were also found throughout the axonal cross-section, but the subaxolemmal region of the axon contained 2.5 times more SCb radioactivity than any comparable area in the remainder of the axon.  相似文献   

2.
The organization of the axonal cytoskeleton was investigated by analyzing the solubility and transport profile of the major cytoskeletal proteins in motor axons of the rat sciatic nerve under normal and regenerating conditions. When extracted with the Triton-containing buffer at low temperature, 50% of tubulin and 30% of actin were recovered in the insoluble form resistant to further depolymerizing treatments. Most of this cold-insoluble form was transported in slow component a (SCa), the slower of the two subcomponents of slow axonal transport, whereas the cold-soluble form showed a biphasic distribution between SCa and SCb (slow component b). Changes in slow transport during regeneration were studied by injuring the nerve either prior to (experiment I) or after (experiment II) radioactive labeling. In experiment I where the transport of proteins synthesized in response to injury was examined, selective acceleration of SCb was detected together with an increase in the relative proportion of this component. In experiment II where the response of the preexisting cytoskeleton was examined, a shift from SCa to SCb of the cold-soluble form was observed. The differential distribution and response of the two forms of tubulin and actin suggest that the cold-soluble form may be more directly involved in axonal transport.  相似文献   

3.
Calmodulin is a soluble, heat-stable protein which has been shown to modulate both membrane-bound and soluble enzymes, but relatively little has been known about the in vivo associations of calmodulin. A 17,000-dalton heat-stable protein was found to move in axonal transport in the guinea pig visual system with the proteins of slow component b (SCb; 2 mm/d) along with actin and the bulk of the soluble proteins of the axon. Co-electrophoresis of purified calmodulin and radioactively labeled SCb proteins in two dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) demonstrated the identity of the heat-stable SCb protein and calmodulin on the basis of pI, molecular weight, and anomalous migration in the presence of Ca2+-chelating agents. No proteins co-migrating with calmodulin in two-dimensional PAGE could be detected among the proteins of slow component a (SCa; 0.3 mm/d, microtubules and neurofilaments) or fast component (FC; 250 mm/d, membrane-associated proteins). We conclude that calmodulin is transported solely as part of the SCb complex of proteins, the axoplasmic matrix. Calmodulin moves in axonal transport independent of the movements of microtubules (SCa) and membranes (FC), which suggests that the interactions of calmodulin with these structures may represent a transient interaction between groups of proteins moving in axonal transport at different rates. Axonal transport has been shown to be an effective tool for the demonstration of long-term in vivo protein associations.  相似文献   

4.
The axonal transport of the diverse isotubulins in the motor axons of the rat sciatic nerve was studied by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after intraspinal injection of [35S]methionine. 3 wk after injection, the nerve segments carrying the labeled axonal proteins of the slow components a (SCa) and b (SCb) of axonal transport were homogenized in a cytoskeleton-stabilizing buffer and two distinct fractions, cytoskeletal (pellet, insoluble) and soluble (supernatant), were obtained by centrifugation. About two-thirds of the transported-labeled tubulin moved with SCa, the remainder with SCb. In both waves, tubulin was found to be associated mainly with the cytoskeletal fraction. The same isoforms of tubulin were transported with SCa and SCb; however, the level of a neuron-specific beta-tubulin subcomponent, termed beta', composed of two related isotubulins beta'1 and beta'2, was significantly greater in SCb than in SCa, relative to the other tubulin isoforms. In addition, certain specific isotubulins were unequally distributed between the cytoskeletal and the soluble fractions. In SCa as well as in SCb, alpha'-isotubulins were completely soluble in the motor axons. By contrast, alpha' and beta'2-isotubulins, both posttranslationally modified isoforms, were always recovered in the cytoskeletal fraction and thus may represent isotubulins restricted to microtubule polymers. The different distribution of isotubulins suggests that a recruitment of tubulin isoforms, including specific posttranslational modifications of defined isoforms (such as, at least, phosphorylation of beta' and acetylation of alpha'), might be involved in the assembly of distinct subsets of axonal microtubules displaying differential properties of stability, velocity and perhaps of function.  相似文献   

5.
During axonal transport, membranes travel down axons at a rapid rate, whereas the cytoskeletal elements travel in either of two slow components, SCa (with tubulin and neurofilament protein) and SCb (with actin). Clathrin, the highly ordered, structural coat protein of coated vesicles, has recently been shown to be able to interact in vitro with cytoskeletal proteins in addition to membranes. The present study examines whether clathrin travels preferentially with the membrane elements or the cytoskeletal elements when it is axonally transported. Guinea pig visual system was labeled with tritiated amino acids. Radioactive SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profiles from the major components of transport were coelectrophoresed with clathrin. Only SCb had a band comigrating with clathrin. In addition, radioactive clathrin was purified from guinea pig brain containing only radioactive SCb polypeptides. Kinetic analysis of the putative clathrin band in SCb revealed that it travels entirely within the SCb wave. Thus we conclude that clathrin travels preferentially with the cytoskeletal proteins making up SCb, rather than with the membranes and membrane-associated proteins in the fast component.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously shown that a nerve conditioning lesion (CL) made 2 weeks prior to amputation results in an earlier onset of limb regeneration in newts. Studies in fish and mammals demonstrate that when a CL precedes a nerve testing lesion, slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport is increased compared to axons that had not received a CL. We wanted to know whether the earlier initiation of limb regeneration after a CL was associated with an increase in SCb transport. The transport of [35S]methionine labeled SCb proteins was measured by using SDS-PAGE, fluorography, and scintillation counting. The rate of transport and quantity of SCb proteins was determined at 7, 14, 21, and 28 days after injection of [35S]methionine into the motor columns of normal; single lesioned (i.e., transection axotomy, amputation axotomy, or sham CL followed by amputation); and double-lesioned limb axons (i.e., nerve transection CL followed 2 weeks later by amputation axotomy). The rate of SCb transport in axons of unamputated newt limbs was 0.19 mm/day. There was an increase in the amount of labeled SCb proteins transported in axons regenerating as the result of a single lesion but no acceleration in the rate of SCb transport, which was 0.21 mm/day in axons that received a sham CL followed by limb amputation. The rate of SCb transport doubled (0.40 mm/day) and the amount of labeled SCb proteins being transported was increased when amputation was preceded by a CL. This study demonstrates that the earlier onset of limb regrowth, seen when amputation follows a CL, is associated with an increased transport of SCb proteins. This suggests that limb regeneration is, in part, regulated by axonal regrowth. We propose that the blastema requires a minimum quantity of innervation before progressing to the next stage of limb regeneration, and that the transport of SCb proteins determines when that quantity will be available.  相似文献   

7.
The impairment of slow axonal transport of cytoskeletal proteins was studied in the sciatic nerves of streptozocin-diabetic rats. [35S]Methionine was unilaterally injected into the fourth lumbar ganglion and spinal cord, to label the sensory and motor axons, respectively, and then the polymerized elements of the cytoskeleton and the corresponding soluble proteins were analyzed separately. In addition, the pellet/supernatant ratio for tubulin and actin was also assessed. Our results indicate that the velocity of slow component a (SCa) of axonal transport, particularly that of neurofilaments, was strongly reduced (by 60%) in sensory axons. At the same time, a decreased pellet/supernatant ratio of tubulin, possibly owing to a depolymerization of stable microtubules, was also observed. The transport of slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport was also impaired, but the extent of this impairment could not be precisely evaluated. In contrast, motor axons showed little or no impairment of both SCa and SCb at the time studied, a result suggesting a delayed development of the neuropathy in motor axons.  相似文献   

8.
Because the integrity of an axon depends on the supply of proteins synthesized in the cell body, we examined the effect of axotomy on the transport of structural proteins in rat motor axons, and the effect of altered transport on the rate of outgrowth after a subsequent testing axotomy. To examine the axonal transport of structural proteins, we labeled newly synthesized proteins with 35S-methionine 7 days after a "conditioning" lesion of the sciatic nerve, and removed the nerve 7-21 days later for SDS-PAGE. Tubulin, actin, calmodulin, and the 68-kD light neurofilament protein (NF-L) were identified by fluorography and removed for liquid scintillation counting. The fastest moving structural proteins were carried by slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport, which advanced 20% faster in conditioned axons: 4.2 versus 3.5 mm/day (p less than 0.01). NF-L was not accelerated, indicating that the motor for subcomponent a (SCa) of slow axonal transport was unaffected by axotomy. To measure outgrowth distances, the testing lesions was made 7 days after the conditioning lesion, and growth cones were located by the fast transport method 3 or 9 days later. The regression analysis of outgrowth distance on time showed that sprouts elongated 25% faster in conditioned axons: 4.0 versus 3.2 mm/day (p less than 0.001). These accelerated sprouts were formed too far from the spinal cord to contain SCb proteins that were synthesized after axotomy. Because the rate of outgrowth correlated closely with the rate of SCb in outgrowing sprouts (McQuarrie and Jacob, J. Comp. Neurol. 305:139-147, 1991), we conclude that SCb is accelerated throughout the length of the axon by 7 days after axotomy.  相似文献   

9.
Pulse-labeling studies of slow axonal transport in many kinds of axons (spinal motor, sensory ganglion, oculomotor, hypoglossal, and olfactory) have led to the inference that axonal transport mechanisms move neurofilaments (NFs) unidirectionally as a single continuous kinetic population with a diversity of individual transport rates. One study in mouse optic axons (Nixon, R. A., and K. B. Logvinenko. 1986. J. Cell Biol. 102:647-659) has given rise to the different suggestion that a significant and distinct population of NFs may be entirely stationary within axons. In mouse optic axons, there are relatively few NFs and the NF proteins are more lightly labeled than other slowly transported slow component b (SCb) proteins (which, however, move faster than the NFs); thus, in mouse optic axons, the radiolabel of some of these faster-moving SCb proteins may confuse NF protein analyses that use one dimensional (1-D) SDS-PAGE, which separates proteins by size only. To test this possibility, we used a 2-mm "window" (at 3-5 mm from the posterior of the eye) to compare NF kinetics obtained by 1-D SDS-PAGE and by the higher resolution two-dimensional (2-D) isoelectric focusing/SDS-PAGE, which separates proteins both by their net charge and by their size. We found that 1-D SDS-PAGE is insufficient for definitive NF kinetics in the mouse optic system. By contrast, 2-D SDS-PAGE provides essentially pure NF kinetics, and these indicate that in the NF-poor mouse optic axons, most NFs advance as they do in other, NF-rich axons. In mice, greater than 97% of the radiolabeled NFs were distributed in a unimodal wave that moved at a continuum of rates, between 3.0 and 0.3 mm/d, and less than 0.1% of the NF population traveled at the very slowest rates of less than 0.005 mm/d. These results are inconsistent with the proposal (Nixon and Logvinenko, 1986) that 32% of the transported NFs remain within optic axons in an entirely stationary state. As has been found in other axons, the axonal transport system of mouse optic axons moves NFs and other cytoskeletal elements relentlessly from the cell body to the axon tip.  相似文献   

10.
Because the integrity of an axon depends on the supply of proteins synthesized in the cell body, we examined the effect of axotomy on the transport of structural proteins in rat motor axons, and the effect of altered transport on the rate of outgrowth after a subsequent testing axotomy. To examine the axonal transport of structural proteins, we labeled newly synthesized proteins with 35 S-methiomine 7 days after a “conditioning” lesion of the sciatic nerve, and removed the nerve 7–21 days later for SDS-PAGE. Tubulin, actin, calmodulin, and the 68-kD light neurofilament protein (NF-L) were identified by fluorography and removed for liquid scintillation counting. The fastest moving structural proteins were carried by slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport, which advanced 20% faster in conditioned axons: 4.2 versus 3.5 mm/day (p < 0.01). NF-L was not accelerated, indicating that the motor for subcomponent a (SCa) of slow axonal transport was unaffected by axotomy. To measure outgrowth distances, the testing lesion was made 7 days after the conditioning lesion, and growth cones were located by the fast transport method 3 or 9 days later. The regression analysis of outgrowth distance on time showed that sprouts elongated 25% faster in conditioned axons: 4.0 versus 3.2 mm/day (p < 0.001). These accelerated sprouts were formed too far from the spinal cord to contain SCb proteins that were synthesized after axotomy. Because the rate of outgrowth correlates closely with the rate of SCb in outgrowing sprouts (McQuarrie and Jacob, J. Comp. Neurol. 305:139–147, 1991), we conclude that SCb is accelerated throughout the length of the axon by 7 days after axotomy.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: Axonal transport of microtubule-associated protein τ was studied in the motor fibers of the rat sciatic nerve 1–4 weeks after labeling of the spinal cord with [35S]methionine. As 60–70% of low molecular weight τ in this system was found to be insoluble in 1% Triton-containing buffer, labeled proteins in 6-mm consecutive nerve segments were first separated into Triton-soluble and insoluble fractions. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting with anti-tau antibody confirmed the presence of τ among labeled, transported proteins in both fractions. Isoform composition of labeled τ was similar to that of bulk axonal τ, the most acidic species with apparent molecular mass of 66 kDa being the major component. Transport profiles obtained by measuring radioactivities associated with this major isoform showed that soluble and insoluble τ were transported at different rates. Insoluble τ, which contained the majority of τ-associated radioactivity, was transported at 1.7 mm/day in slow component a (SCa), whereas soluble τ was transported faster, at 3 mm/day, corresponding to the rate of slow component b (SCb). Cotransport of insoluble τ with insoluble tubulin in SCa suggests its association with stable microtubules.  相似文献   

12.
Anterograde slow and fast axonal transport was examined in rats intoxicated with 2,5-hexanedione (1 g/kg/week) for 8 weeks. Distribution of radioactivity was measured in 3-mm segments of the sciatic nerve after labelling of proteins with [35S]methionine or [3H]leucine and glycoproteins with [3H]fucose. The axonal transport of the anterograde slow components was examined after 25 (SCa) and 10 days (SCb), in motor and sensory nerves. SCa showed an increased transport velocity in motor (1.25 +/- 0.08 mm/day versus 1.01 +/- 0.05 mm/day) and in sensory nerves (1.21 +/- 0.13 mm/day versus 1.06 +/- 0.07 mm/day). The relative amount of labelled protein in the SCa wave in both fiber systems was also increased. SCb showed unchanged transport velocity in motor as well as in sensory nerves, whereas the amount of label was decreased in the motor system. Anterograde fast transport in motor nerves was examined after intervals of 3 and 5 h, whereas intervals of 2 and 4 h were used for sensory nerves. Velocities and amounts of labelled proteins of the anterograde fast component remained normal. We suggest that the increase in protein transport in SCa reflects axonal regeneration.  相似文献   

13.
S T Brady  R J Lasek 《Cell》1981,23(2):515-523
The axonal transport of two soluble enzymes of intermediary metabolism was evaluated: the nerve-specific form of the glycolytic enzyme enolase (NSE) and the brain isozyme of creatine phosphokinase (CPK). Previously, little was known about the intracellular movements of the soluble proteins of the cell. Although the soluble enzymes of glycolysis and other pathways of intermediary metabolism have been thought to be freely diffusing in the cytosol, many are required in the axonal extremities of the neuron and must be transported to the sites of utilization. Comigration of purified enzymes with radioactive polypeptides associated with specific rate components of axonal transport in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis indicates that both NSE and CPK move in the axon solely as part of the group of proteins known as slow component b (SCb) at a rate of 2 mm/day. Peptide mapping following limited proteolysis confirmed identification of NSE and CPK in SCb. Materials associated with SCb have been shown to move coherently along the axon and to behave as a discrete cellular structure, the axoplasmic matrix. Association of two soluble enzymes, NSE and CPK, with the SCb complex of proteins requires a reevaluation of the assumption that these and other soluble proteins of the axon are freely diffusible.  相似文献   

14.
Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) in neurons establish functional associations with microtubules, sometimes at considerable distances from their site of synthesis. In this study we identified MAP 1A in mouse retinal ganglion cells and characterized for the first time its in vivo dynamics in relation to axonally transported tubulin. A soluble 340-kD polypeptide was strongly radiolabeled in ganglion cells after intravitreal injection of [35S]methionine or [3H]proline. This polypeptide was identified as MAP 1A on the basis of its co-migration on SDS gels with MAP 1A from brain microtubules; its co-assembly with microtubules in the presence of taxol or during cycles of assembly-disassembly; and its cross-reaction with well-characterized antibodies against MAP 1A in immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation assays. Glial cells of the optic nerve synthesized considerably less MAP 1A than neurons. The axoplasmic transport of MAP 1A differed from that of tubulin. Using two separate methods, we observed that MAP 1A advanced along optic axons at a rate of 1.0-1.2 mm/d, a rate typical of the Group IV (SCb) phase of transport, while tubulin moved 0.1-0.2 mm/d, a group V (SCa) transport rate. At least 13% of the newly synthesized MAP 1A entering optic axons was incorporated uniformly along axons into stationary axonal structures. The half-residence time of stationary MAP 1A in axons (55-60 d) was 4.6 times longer than that of MAP 1A moving in Group IV, indicating that at least 44% of the total MAP 1A in axons is stationary. These results demonstrate that cytoskeletal proteins that become functionally associated with each other in axons may be delivered to these sites at different transport rates. Stable associations between axonal constituents moving at different velocities could develop when these elements leave the transport vector and incorporate into the stationary cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

15.
A model for slow axonal transport is developed in which the essential features are reversible binding of cytoskeletal elements and of soluble cytosolic proteins to each other and to motile elements such as actin microfilaments. Computer simulation of the equations of the model demonstrate that the model can account for many of the features of the SCa and SCb waves observed in pulse experiments. The model also provides a unified explanation for the increase and decrease of neurofilament transport rates observed in various toxicant-induced neuropathies.  相似文献   

16.
Rises in intracellular calcium cause several events of physiological significance, including the regulated release of neuronal transmitters. In this study, the effects of divalent cations on the structural organization of cytomatrix in presynaptic terminals was examined. [35S]Methionine-radiolabeled guinea pig retinal ganglion cell cytomatrix proteins were axonally transported [in slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport] to the neuron terminals in the superior colliculus. When the peak of radiolabeled cytomatrix proteins reached the terminals, synaptosomes containing the radiolabeled cytomatrix proteins were prepared. Approximately 40% of each SCb protein was soluble after hypoosmotic lysis of the radiolabeled synaptosomes in the presence of divalent cation chelators. Lysis of synaptosomes in the presence of calcium ions over a range of concentrations, however, caused a dramatic decrease in solubility of the presynaptic SCb proteins. The cytoplasmic effects may result from a calcium-dependent condensation of cytoplasm around presynaptic terminal membrane systems. There are two major presynaptic SCb proteins (at 60 and 35 kDa), that exhibited exceptional behavior: they remained as soluble in the presence of calcium as under control conditions, suggesting that they were relatively unaffected by the mechanism causing the decrease in SCb protein solubility. Also examined were the effects of other alkaline earth and transition metal divalent cations on the presynaptic SCb proteins.  相似文献   

17.
《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   

18.
Polypeptides in the dorsal root ganglion (L5) of the adult rat were radioactively labeled, and components slowly migrating in the sciatic nerve (peripheral axons) and dorsal root (central axons) were analyzed, using SDS-polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis and fluorography. In particular, the transport rates and amounts of six major polypeptides, i.e., the triplet (reference 15; with mol wts of 200,000, 160,000, and 68,000 daltons), alpha- and beta-tubulins and actin were compared between the two axon branches. In peripheral axons, fronts of the triplet, tubulins, and actin migrate at 2-3 mm/d, 9-13 mm/d and approximately 19 mm/d, respectively. The corresponding values in central axons are 1-2 mm/d, 3-4 mm/d, and approximately 4 mm/d, indicating an obvious asymmetry in the transport rate between the two branches of bifurcating axons. A greater amount of labeled triplet, tubulins, and actin each is found to migrate in peripheral than in central axons. Another striking aspect of asymmetry between the two branches relates to the tubulins/triplet ratio which is significantly higher in the peripheral branch. Considerable proportions of radioactivities associated with tubulins and actin in the ganglion are nonmigratory, which are thought to derive mostly from periaxonal satellite cells. In contrast, most if not all of the labeled triplet is migratory, suggesting a virtual absence of triplet polypeptides in satellite cells. The possible significance of peripheral-central inequalities in slow axoplasmic transport is discussed from the viewpoints of axon volume and axonal outgrowth.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the fate of neurofilament proteins (NFPs) in mouse retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons from 1 to 180 d after synthesis and examined the proximal-to-distal distribution of the newly synthesized 70-, 140-, and 200-kD subunits along RGC axons relative to the distribution of neurofilaments. Improved methodology for intravitreal delivery of [3H]proline enabled us to quantitate changes in the accumulation and subsequent decline of radiolabeled NFP subunits at various postinjection intervals and, for the first time, to estimate the steady state levels of NFPs in different pools within axons. Two pools of newly synthesized triplet NFPs were distinguished based on their kinetics of disappearance from a 9-mm "axonal window" comprising the optic nerve and tract and their temporal-spatial distribution pattern along axons. The first pool disappeared exponentially between 17 and 45 d after injection with a half-life of 20 d. Its radiolabeled wavefront advanced along axons at 0.5-0.7 mm/d before reaching the distal end of the axonal window at 17 d, indicating that this loss represented the exit of neurofilament proteins composing the slowest phase of axoplasmic transport (SCa or group V) from axons. About 32% of the total pool of radiolabeled neurofilament proteins, however, remained in axons after 45 d and disappeared exponentially at a much slower rate (t 1/2 = 55 d). This second NFP pool assumed a nonuniform distribution along axons that was characterized proximally to distally by a 2.5-fold gradient of increasing radioactivity. This distribution pattern did not change between 45 and 180 d indicating that neurofilament proteins in the second pool constitute a relatively stationary structure in axons. Based on the relative radioactivities and residence time (or turnover) of each neurofilament pool in axons, we estimate that, in the steady state, more neurofilament proteins in mouse RGC axons may be stationary than are undergoing continuous slow axoplasmic transport. This conclusion was supported by biochemical analyses of total NFP content and by electron microscopic morphometric studies of neurofilament distribution along RGC axons. The 70-, 140-, and 200-kD subunits displayed a 2.5-fold proximal to distal gradient of increasing content along RGC axons. Neurofilaments were more numerous at distal axonal levels, paralleling the increased content of NFP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The composition of the fast and slow components of axonal transport in the goldfish optic nerve was investigated, using specific radioactive precursors injected into the eye. Tritiated glucosamine and fucose label macromolecules, presumably glycoproteins, which are rapidly transported from the eye to the optic tectum. Material labeled with these precursors is not evident in the slowly transported component. Glucosamine and fucose incorporation are blocked when a protein synthesis inhibitor, acetoxycycloheximide, is injected into the eye concurrently with the precursors. As well as labeling macromolecules, 3H-glucosamine and 3H-N-acetylmannosamine ( a precursor of sialic acids) also label rapidly-transported chloroform-methanol-extractable material which may contain transported glycolipids. Two procedures were used to show that the slow component of axonal transport contains tubulin, a protein characteristic of the microtubules:
  • (a) Tracer doses of tritiated colchicine injected into the eye label a wave of radioactivity which moves 0.5 mm/day, the rate of slow axonal transport in the goldfish optic nerve. We believe this wave represents the movement of colchicine which is bound to colchicine-binding protein moving in the slow component of axonal transport.
  • (b) Tritiated proline labels a slowly transported protein which is precipitated by vinblastine and has a mobility on polyacrylamide gels comparable to authentic tubulin. These results indicate that the fast and slow components of axonal transport each provide specific chemical substances to the nerve endings.
  相似文献   

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