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1.
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.
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2.
Rapid movement of microtubules in axons   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Wang L  Brown A 《Current biology : CB》2002,12(17):1496-1501
Cytoskeletal and cytosolic proteins are transported along axons in the slow components of axonal transport at average rates of about 0.002-0.1 microm/s. This movement is essential for axonal growth and survival, yet the mechanism is poorly understood. Many studies on slow axonal transport have focused on tubulin, the subunit protein of microtubules, but attempts to observe the movement of this protein in cultured nerve cells have been largely unsuccessful. Here, we report direct observations of the movement of microtubules in cultured nerve cells using a modified fluorescence photobleaching strategy combined with difference imaging. The movements are rapid, with average rates of 1 microm/s, but they are also infrequent and highly asynchronous. These observations indicate that microtubules are propelled along axons by fast motors. We propose that the overall rate of movement is slow because the microtubules spend only a small proportion of their time moving. The rapid, infrequent, and highly asynchronous nature of the movement may explain why the axonal transport of tubulin has eluded detection in so many other studies.  相似文献   

3.
Further studies of the transport of protein to nerve endings   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Mice were injected intracerebrally with [l-14C]leucine, and the specific activities of subcellular fractions of brain and effractions of isolated nerve endings were determined. There was a progressive increase in the specific activity of protein associated with isolated nerve endings after incorporation of [l-14C]leucine into whole brain protein had terminated. Although, the incorporation of [14C]leucine into soluble protein of whole brain did not differ significantly in mice which were 3 months or 1-year old, the subsequent increase in specific activity of soluble protein isolated from nerve endings was significantly greater in the younger animals; 6-month-old mice were intermediate. Therefore, changes in some aspect of the transport of protein to nerve endings is altered even after sexual maturity. Anaesthetization with pentobarbitone during incorporation of [14C]leucine into protein, and inhibition of protein synthesis with acetoxycycloheximide after incorporation of [14C]leucine was complete, did not interfere with the subsequent appearance of radioactive protein at the nerve ending. Evidence is presented for the transport, from a proximal site of synthesis, of protein associated with particulate components of the nerve ending, including synaptic vesicles.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: Adult rats were injected intraocularly with [35S]methionine and killed from 1 to 10 weeks later. Optic nerves, optic tracts, and superior colliculi were dissected and then homogenized and separated into soluble and particulate fractions by centrifugation. Radioactivity coelectrophoresing with tubulin in buffers containing sodium dodecyl sulfate was determined (in cytoplasmic fractions, preliminary enrichment was achieved by vinblastine precipitation). Accumulation of radioactive tubulin along the optic pathway occurred in parallel (and in approximately equal amounts) in cytoplasmic and particulate fractions. Transported tubulin peaked at approximately 2 and 4 weeks in the optic nerve and tract, respectively, corresponding to a transport rate of ~ 0.4 mm/ day. There was little diminution in the amount of transported tubulin between optic nerve and tract, suggesting tubulin was not degraded in the axon. Accumulation in the superior colliculus reached a plateau by 4 weeks at less than 20% of the peak in the optic nerve, indicating turnover of tubulin at the nerve endings. The α/β subunit labeling ratio (radioactivity distribution between the tubulin subunits) was 0.57 for both cytoplasmic- and particulate-transported tubulin. In contrast, this ratio was 0.69 for whole brain tubulin prepared by vinblastine precipitation of soluble material. Isoelectric focusing and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed that the subunit compositions (microheterogeneity of the α and β bands) of transported tubulins in the cytoplasmic and particulate fractions were very similar. However, some differences relative to whole brain tubulin were noted; a tubulin subunit not identifiable in whole brain tubulin preparations but present in both soluble- and particulate-transported tubulin was observed. Because of the compositional and metabolic similarities of transported tubulin in the soluble and particulate fractions, we conclude that they form a common metabolic pool. This suggests either that, at least for some membranes, the well-characterized tight association between particulate tubulin and membranes may be artifactual or else that an equilibrium exists between soluble and particulate tubulin.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the axonal transport characteristics of major cytoskeletal proteins: tubulin, the 69,000 molecular weight protein of chicken neurofilaments, and actin. After intracerebral injection of [35S]methionine, we monitored the specific radioactivity of these proteins as they passed through a very short nerve segment of the chicken oculomotor nerve. Specific radioactivities were assessed by quantitative sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The transport patterns obtained for tubulin and the neurofilament protein were very similar, corresponding to transport rate ranges of 1-15 and 1-10 mm/day, respectively. A narrower velocity range of 3 to 4.3 mm/day was found for actin. Tubulin and the neurofilament protein appeared to be largely dispersed during the course of their transit along the nerve. The radioactivity associated with the proteins studied persisted in the nerve segment for a long time after the bulk of the labeled molecules had swept down. Finally, none of these proteins was observed to be transported with the fast axonal transport.  相似文献   

6.
Binding of γ-Aminobutyric AcidA Receptors to Tubulin   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Abstract: The rate of axonal transport of tubulin, actin, and the neurofilament proteins was measured in the peripheral and central projections of the rat L5 dorsal root ganglion (DRG). [35S]Methionine was injected into the DRG, and the "front" of the radiolabeled protein was located 7, 14, and 20 days postinjection. Transport rates calculated for the neurofilament triplet proteins, tubulin, and actin in the peripheral nerve were ∼ 1.5-fold faster than those in the dorsal root. A progressive decrease in the rate of transport was observed from 7 to 20 days after radiolabeling in both the central and peripheral directions (neurofilaments, ∼ 1.7-fold; tubulin/actin, 2.1-fold). A surgical preparation, leaving the peripheral sciatic nerve with predominantly sensory fibers, was the basis for ELISAs for phosphorylation-dependent immunoreactivity of the high-molecular-weight neurofilament protein. In both dorsal roots and peripheral sensory axons the degree of phosphorylation was greater in nerve segments further away from the cell bodies. The degree of phosphorylation-related immunoreactivity correlates with the slowing of transport of radiolabeled cytoskeletal protein.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: To elucidate the role of neurofilaments in microtubule stabilization in the axon, we studied the effects of β,β'-iminodipropionitrile (IDPN) on the solubility and transport of tubulin as well as neurofilament phosphorylation in the motor fibers of the rat sciatic nerve. IDPN is known to impair the axonal transport of neurofilaments, causing accumulation of neurofilaments in the proximal axon and segregation of neurofilaments to the peripheral axoplasm throughout the nerve. Administration of IDPN at various intervals after radioactive labeling of the spinal cord with l -[35S]methionine revealed that transport inhibition occurred all along the nerve within 1–2 days. Transport of cold-insoluble tubulin, which accounts for 50% of axonal tubulin, was also affected. A significant increase in the proportion of cold-soluble tubulin was observed, reaching a maximum at 3 days after IDPN treatment and returning to the control level in the following weeks. Preceding this change in tubulin solubility, a transient decrease in the phosphorylation level of the 200-kDa neurofilament protein was detected in the ventral root using phosphorylation-dependent antibodies. These early changes agreed in timing with the onset of segregation and transport inhibition, suggesting that interaction between neurofilaments and microtubules possibly regulated by phosphorylation plays a significant role in microtubule stabilization.  相似文献   

8.
The delivery of neurofilaments via axonal transport has been proposed as an important mechanism for regulating axonal caliber. If this hypothesis is correct, alterations in axonal caliber should appear coincident with changes in the delivery of neurofilaments to the axon. The purpose of this study was to determine whether alterations in the caliber of axons in the proximal stumps of transected motor fibers precede, coincide with, or occur substantially later than changes in the delivery of neurofilaments via axonal transport. Between 3 d and 12 wk after crushing the sciatic nerves of 7-wk-old rats, lumbar motor neurons were labeled by the intraspinal injection of [35S]methionine. In neurons labeled between 3 d and 6 wk after axotomy, the relative amount of neurofilament protein in the slow component, as reflected by the ratio of the radioactivities of the 145-kD neurofilament protein to tubulin, was reduced to 30-40% of the control value. Moreover, as determined by immunoreactivity on blots, the amounts of neurofilament protein and tubulin in these nerve fibers were reduced fourfold and twofold, respectively. Thus, changes in the ratio of labeled neurofilament protein to tubulin correlated with comparable changes in the quantities of these proteins in nerve fibers. This decrease in the quantity of neurofilament proteins delivered to axons coincided temporally with reductions in axonal caliber. After regeneration occurred, the delivery of neurofilament proteins returned to pre-axotomy levels (i.e., 8 wk after axotomy), and caliber was restored with resumption of normal age-related radial growth of these axons. Thus, changes in axonal caliber coincided temporally with alterations in the delivery of neurofilament proteins. These results suggest that the majority of neurofilaments in these motor fibers continuously move in the anterograde direction as part of the slow component of axonal transport and that the transport of neurofilaments plays an important role in regulating the caliber of these axons.  相似文献   

9.
Summary A morphometric analysis has demonstrated ultrastructural changes induced by hypoxia in the epithelial cells and the intracorpuscular nerve endings of the presumed chemoreceptive intrapulmonary neuroepithelial bodies (NEB) of neonatal rabbits.Acute hypoxia stimulates an exocytosis of epithelial dense-core vesicles (DCV) at the level of the morphologically afferent or sensory (type 1 a) intracorpuscular nerve endings of the NEB. Assuming the epithelial cells to be chemoreceptive, this phenomenon could represent a transduction of sensory stimuli.In the morphologically efferent or motor (type 2 and type 1 b) intracorpuscular nerve endings of the NEB, acute hypoxia causes a depletion of synaptic vesicles and an increase in the amount of membrane-bounded cisternae and multivesicular bodies, suggestive of an enhanced synaptic activity of these nerve endings. It is proposed that the chemoreceptor cells could thus in turn be modulated centrifugally by their efferent-like intracorpuscular nerve endings.It has been proposed in our earlier studies that the NEB probably are intrapulmonary chemoreceptors with local secretory activities, reacting to the composition of the inhaled air. By the release of serotonin and peptide substances they may produce a local vasoconstriction in hypoxically aerated lung areas, enabling an intrapulmonary regulation of the V/Q ratio. The present study provides evidence that, in addition to this local effect, NEB could generate centripetal nerve impulses via exocytosis of epithelial DCV at the afferent-like intracorpuscular nerve endings. At the same time they could be modulated by the CNS via their efferent-like intracorpuscular nerve endings.With respect to their innervation, numerous similarities appear to exist morphologically and functionally between the carotid body and the intrapulmonary NEB.  相似文献   

10.
In neurons, tubulin is synthesized primarily in the cell body, whereas the molecular machinery for neurite extension and elaboration of microtubule (MT) array is localized to the growth cone region. This unique functional and biochemical compartmentalization of neuronal cells requires transport mechanisms for the delivery of newly synthesized tubulin and other cytoplasmic components from the cell body to the growing axon. According to the polymer transport model, tubulin is transported along the axon as a polymer. Because the majority of axonal MTs are stationary at any given moment, it has been assumed that only a small fraction of MTs translocates along the axon by saltatory movement reminiscent of the fast axonal transport. Such intermittent "stop and go" MT transport has been difficult to detect or to exclude by using direct video microscopy methods. In this study, we measured the translocation of MT plus ends in the axonal shaft by expressing GFP-EB1 in Xenopus embryo neurons in culture. Formal quantitative analysis of MT assembly/disassembly indicated that none of the MTs in the axonal shaft were rapidly transported. Our results suggest that transport of axonal MTs is not required for delivery of newly synthesized tubulin to the growing nerve processes.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract— Radioactive cystathionine, a metabolic precursor of taurine, was injected into the right eye of goldfish. At various times after injection the retina and both optic tecta were extracted with trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and the amount and nature of the radioactivity was determined. Radioactive taurine and inorganic sulfate were present in the TCA-soluble extract of retina and radioactive taurine and a small amount of inorganic sulfate was found in the contralateral optic tectum. That taurine is migrating intraaxonally and is not diffusing in extraaxonal spaces is suggested from experiments in which the migration of taurine was compared with that of [14C]mannitol, used here as a marker of extracellular diffusion. In the time studied (up to 15 h) mannitol did not migrate to the tectum, whereas taurine was detectable in the tectum as early as 8 h after injection. Since intra-axonal diffusion of amino acids and other small molecules in this system has been ruled out, it is likely that taurine is being transported axonally. The axonal transport of taurine was found to be similar to the fast component of protein transport because: (1) their rates of transport are similar, (2) the transport of both is blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, (3) vinblastine, which disrupts neurotubules, appears to have similar effects on both protein and taurine transport, and (4) both rapidly transported proteins and taurine remain mostly intra-axonal once they have been transported to the tectum. Taurine and proteins differ in that rapidly transported proteins are primarily paniculate in nature and localized to a large extent in nerve endings, while taurine is primarily in a soluble fraction and is present in nerve endings only in trace amounts. We suggest that taurine may be loosely linked to a newly synthesized protein in the soma and is then transported along with that protein on a similar conveying mechanism in the axoplasm.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of iron-dependent peroxidation on respiration and neurotransmitter transport of brain nerve endings has been studied. Rat brain synaptosomes were peroxidized by exposure to an ADP-Fe/ascorbate system and the protective effect of added Se, Cd, or Zn was investigated with regard to dopamine and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transport. Peroxidation impaired the respiration of synaptosomes by about 20% and caused a marked increase in dopamine uptake; but in contrast, peroxidation induced a large decrease in synaptosomal uptake of GABA. The increased dopamine transport into synaptosomes was partially prevented by the presence of Zn, Se, or Cd. The presence of Zn, Cd, or Se, in order of decreasing effectiveness, also slowed down ADP-Fe/ascorbate mediated peroxidation of synaptosomes. Peroxidation caused a significant inhibition of veratridine-dependent release of both dopamine and GABA from synaptosomes, but the KCl-dependent release of these neurotransmitters was not effected by peroxidation. These results implicate that peroxidation damage of nerve endings may lead to large changes in neurotransmitter transport thus resulting in an alteration in the function of the central nervous system.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: Following intraocular injection of [3H]fucose in the rat, radioactive glycoproteins are rapidly transported to the nerve terminals in at least two waves, one with a peak at 8 h and a second with a peak at about a week. The molecular weight distribution of radioactive peptides in ach transport wave as determined by gel electrophoresis in buffers containing sodium dodecyl sulfate is very similar. Most of the many glycopeptides in the first wave of rapid transport pass through the optic tract in unison (apparent half-life of about 15 h) and are preferentially destined for the nerve endings. However, two proteins of apparent M. W. 28,000 and 49,000 are preferentially retained in the axons. The remaining proteins, after reaching the nerve endings (superior colliculus), decay with apparent half-lives ranging from 17 to 34 h. During the second wave a large amount of the 28,000 and 49,000 M. W. peptides are again preferentially retained in the axons. The remaining proteins, on reaching the nerve endings, decay with apparent half-lives ranging from 5 to 9 days. Subcellular fractionation of the superior colliculus supports the hypothesis that the 49,000 and 28,000 M. W. peptides are the predominantly labeled glycoproteins present in myelinated axons (representing over 50% of the radioactive glycoproteins 7 days following injection), although they are probably also present in membranes of the nerve endings. A comparison with glycoprotein transport in other tracts (geniculocortical and nigrostriatal tracts) suggests that glycoprotein transport in these pathways has many similarities to glycoprotein transport in the retinal ganglion cells, and that the optic system is a good general model for axonal transport in the CNS.  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of the nerve growth factor with the neurotubule protein has been studied with the aim of elucidating the nature of the large complexes that they form when incubated together and the factors and control this event. The results show that the binding of nerve growth factor to tubulin is followed by the formation of large structures that, in certain experimental conditions, accelerate the rate of tubulin polymerization to form microtubules or catalyze their assembly in conditions where this process does not occur spontaneously. The formation of large nerve growth factor-tubulin complexes starts to occur only at a molar ratio of 1.0-1.5 NaCL or GTP strongly inhibit this proceed without a detectable effect on NGF binding. Two hypotheses are postulated explain these findings. Firstly, that tubulin has two sites with different affinity for nerve growth factor and the polymerization occurs only when the second NGF molecule has interacted with the microtubule protein. Alternatively, free tubulin in solution is the polymerization by hindering site of tubulin-factor complexes present in solution at a 1.1 molar ratio. In both cases, GTP, Na-+ or H-+ will affect the formation of large unsoluble, tubulin-NGF complexes, by changing their conformation or by decreasing electrostatic interactions.  相似文献   

15.
Chronic low dose exposure to organophosphorus poisons (OP) results in cognitive impairment. Studies in rats have shown that OP interfere with microtubule polymerization. Since microtubules are required for transport of nutrients from the nerve cell body to the nerve synapse, it has been suggested that disruption of microtubule function could explain the learning and memory deficits associated with OP exposure. Tubulin is a major constituent of microtubules. We tested the hypothesis that OP bind to tubulin by treating purified bovine tubulin with sarin, soman, chlorpyrifos oxon, diisopropylfluorophosphate, and 10-fluoroethoxyphosphinyl-N-biotinamidopentyldecanamide (FP-biotin). Tryptic peptides were isolated and analyzed by mass spectrometry. It was found that OP bound to tyrosine 83 of alpha tubulin in peptide TGTYR, tyrosine 59 in beta tubulin peptide YVPR, tyrosine 281 in beta tubulin peptide GSQQYR, and tyrosine 159 in beta tubulin peptide EEYPDR. The OP reactive tyrosines are located either near the GTP binding site or within loops that interact laterally with protofilaments. It is concluded that OP bind covalently to tubulin, and that this binding could explain cognitive impairment associated with OP exposure.  相似文献   

16.
In the sensory fibers of the rat sciatic nerve (fibers of the dorsal root ganglion cells), two components of tubulin transport were observed that differed in the rate of transport, solubility in Triton, and subunit composition. The faster component, migrating ahead of the neurofilament proteins, was soluble in 1% Triton. The slower component, migrating with the neurofilament proteins, was insoluble in 1% Triton and contained a unique polypeptide, "NAP," in the tubulin region that was not present in the faster component. "NAP" was not a subspecies of tubulin as evidenced by peptide mapping. It seems to be a neurofilament-associated protein. When a complete separation of the main tubulin wave from the neurofilament wave was achieved in the motor axons of the same nerve (axons of the ventral motoneurons) under the effect of beta,beta'-iminodipropionitrile, a portion of tubulin was still found associated with the retarded neurofilament wave. The subunit composition of this portion was similar to the slower, neurofilament-associated component in the sensory fibers under normal conditions, i.e., enriched in "NAP" and the most acidic subtype of beta-tubulin. It is suggested that two populations of transported tubulin exist that are differentiated by the extent of their interaction with neurofilaments.  相似文献   

17.
Data on acetylcholine (ACh) synthesis in nerve cells are summarized and the mechanism of regulation of this process is described. Under conditions of relative rest on moderate synaptic activity the ACh concentration in the compartment of its synthesis in cholinergic nerve endings is probably maintained at a level corresponding to equilibrium of the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme choline-acetyltransferase (CAT). ACh release is followed by its transport from the compartment of synthesis into the compartment of secretion and automatic resynthesis of new ACh, until equilibrium is restored in the compartment of synthesis. At the same time synaptic activity and ACh release promote synthesis of new ACh by the following pathways. First, a fall in the ACh concentration in the nerve endings disinhibits carriers for choline, and facilitates choline transfer from the extracellular fluid into the cell in accordance with the electrochemical gradient. Second, hydrolysis of liberated ACh increases the choline concentration in the extracellular fluid in the neighborhood of the nerve endings. Third, postactivation hyperpolarization of the nerve endings facilitates transport of choline and an increase in its concentration in the nerve endings. Fourth, there are grounds for considering that stimulation of muscarine receptors promotes a further increase in the choline concentration in the region of the nerve endings by intensification of phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis in postsynaptic cells. Fifth, a decrease in the acetyl-CoA content on account of ACh resynthesis increases pyruvate dehydrogenase activity and acetyl-CoA production. Sixth, it is possible that an increase in the Ca++ concentration in nerve endings promotes direct transport of acetyl-CoA from the mitochondria into the cytosol of nerve endings, where ACh is synthesized. It is postulated that under conditions of intensive synaptic activity the rate of supply of acetyl-CoA and choline and also CAT activity in the nerve endings may be factors limiting the velocity of ACh resynthesis.Institute of Physiology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Prague. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 16, No. 5, pp. 603–611, September–October, 1984.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of the nerve growth factor with the neurotubule protein has been studied with the aim of elucidating the nature of the large complexes that they form when incubated together and the factors that control this event. The results show that the binding of nerve growth factor to tubulin is followed by the formation of large structures that, in certain experimental conditions, accelerate the rate of tubulin polymerization to form microtubules or catalyze their assembly in conditions where this process does not occur spontaneously. The formation of large nerve growth factor-tubulin complexes starts to occur only at a molar ratio of 1.0–1.5 NaCl or GTP strongly inhibit this process without a detectable effect on NGF binding. Two hypotheses are postulated to explain these finding. Firstly, that tubulin has two sites with different affinity for nerve growth factor and the polymerization occurs only when the second NGF molecule has interacted with the microtubule protein. Alternatively, free tubulin in solution is the limiting factor of the polymerization by hindering a site of tubulin-factor complexes present in solutio at a 1 : 1 molar ratio. In both cases, GTP, Na+ or H+ will affect the formation of large unsoluble, tubulin-NGF complexes, by changing their conformation or by decreasing electrostatic interactions.  相似文献   

19.
Radiolabeled GABA and glutamate transport into 7 day, 14 day and adult cortical nerve ending preparations was examined. Transport was measured at several Na+ concentrations, 19, 27, 43 and 121 mM, and at two temperatures, 15 and 30°C. Km and Vmax values were calculated for all experimental conditions by means of Wilkinson (1961) analysis. A comparison of the day 14 and adult data shows higher Km values at all Na+ concentrations on day 14 for both GABA and glutamate transport. In addition, the temperature dependence of transport was attenuated in the day 14 preparation. Finally, the specificity of GABA transport, as measured by the use of the transport inhibitors β-alanine and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid, was not different between the day 14 and adult preparations. Overall, it is concluded that both GABA and glutamate transport into day 14 nerve endings behave as if “adult” transporter molecules were existing in a more fluid lipid environment, which is the situation found in synaptic membranes prepared from day 14 nerve endings (Hitzemann and Johnson, 1983).Glutamate and GABA transport into 7 day nerve endings is complex and shows marked differences from the day 14 and adult data. Day 7 GABA transport was significantly more sensitive to β-alanine inhibition. Day 7 transport was more sensitive to Na+ manipulation and the temperature dependent kinetics show unique Na+ effects not seen in the day 14 or adult preparations. For example, at 19 mM Na+, 7 day glutamate transport was more temperature dependent than adult transport but as the Na+ concentration was increased the reverse was true. The opposite situation for temperature-Na+ effects was seen for GABA transport. Finally, no Ca+2-dependent component of GABA release could be found in 7 day nerve endings while a significant component was found at day 14. Overall, it is concluded that both glutamate and GABA fluxes in 7 day nerve endings differ both qualitatively from that seen in both day 14 and adult nerve endings.  相似文献   

20.
N Wang  M M Rasenick 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10957-10965
It has been suggested that elements of the cytoskeleton contribute to the signal transduction process and that they do so in association with one or more members of the signal-transducing G protein family. Relatively high-affinity binding between dimeric tubulin and the alpha subunits of Gs and Gi1 has also been reported. Tubulin molecules, which exist in solution as alpha beta dimers, have binding domains for microtubule-associated proteins as well as for other tubulin dimers. This study represents an attempt to ascertain whether the association between G proteins and tubulin occurs at one of these sites. Removal of the binding site for MAP2 and tau from tubulin by subtilisin proteolysis did not influence the association of tubulin with G protein, as demonstrated in overlay studies with [125I]tubulin. A functional consequence of that association, the stable inhibition of synaptic membrane adenylyl cyclase, was also unaffected by subtilisin treatment of tubulin. However, ring structures formed from subtilisin-treated tubulin were incapable of effecting such inhibition. Stable G protein-tubulin complexes were formed, and these were separated from free tubulin by Octyl-Sepharose chromatography. Using this methodology, it was demonstrated that assembled microtubules bound G protein quite weakly compared with tubulin dimers. The alpha subunit of Gi1 and, to a lesser extent, that of Go were demonstrated to inhibit microtubule polymerization. In aggregate, these data suggest that dimeric tubulin binds to the alpha subunits of G protein at the sites where it binds to other tubulin dimers during microtubule polymerization. Interaction with signal-transducing G proteins, thus, might represent a role for tubulin dimers which is independent of microtubule formation.  相似文献   

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