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1.
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   

2.
Axonal transport of tubulin in the rat sciatic nerve is almost completely inhibited by a single subepineural injection of taxol, without affecting that of neurofilament proteins. Actin and a large number of polypeptides cotransported with actin as minor components are also blocked by taxol, although to a lesser extent. Fast axonal transport is essentially free from the inhibitory effect of this drug. Although previous models have suggested that slow axonal transport involves the bulk movement of cytoskeletal structures, these results suggest that such transport may involve an equilibrium between polymerised and depolymerised forms of the axonal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

3.
The synthesis and transport of slowly transported polypeptides in sciatic nerves of rats was investigated by [35S]methionine pulse labeling and gel electrophoresis in control, diabetic, and insulin-treated diabetic rats. To detect very early changes diabetes was induced by streptozocin only 5 days prior to the labeling of the dorsal root ganglion cells. Fourteen days were allowed for axonal transport. In this experimental system, the neurofilament triplet is transported at an apparent velocity of 1.1 +/- 0.1 mm/day (mean +/- SD). The actin-related complex, including actin and two polypeptides of 87 kilodaltons and 37 kilodaltons, was transported at a velocity of 2.6 +/- 0.2 mm/day. For alpha- and beta-tubulin we found an apparent transport velocity of 2.2 +/- 0.1 mm/day, placing it between actin and the neurofilament triplet. The diabetic rats had a selective 32% decrease in the amount of the heaviest neurofilament subunit: 0.47 +/- 0.19% of trichloroacetic acid-insoluble radioactivity versus 0.69 +/- 0.17% in controls; 2p less than 0.05. This decrease was associated with a proximal accumulation of the two lighter neurofilament subunits. Insulin treatment of a diabetic group failed to normalize the changes of axonal transport and additional changes suggesting a hypoglycemic injury was observed.  相似文献   

4.
Axonal transport is known to be impaired in peripheral nerve of experimentally diabetic rats. As axonal transport is dependent on the integrity of the neuronal cytoskeleton, we have studied the way in which rat brain and nerve cytoskeletal proteins are altered in experimental diabetes. Rats were made diabetic by injection of streptozotocin (STZ). Up to six weeks later, sciatic nerves, spinal cords, and brains were removed and used to prepare neurofilaments, microtubules, and a crude preparation of cytoskeletal proteins. The extent of nonenzymatic glycation of brain microtubule proteins and peripheral nerve tubulin was assessed by incubation with3H-sodium borohydride followed by separation on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels and affinity chromatography of the separated proteins. There was no difference in the nonenzymatic glycation of brain microtubule proteins from two-week diabetic and nondiabetic rats. Nor was the assembly of microtubule proteins into microtubules affected by the diabetic state. On the other hand, there was a significant increase in nonenzymatic glycation of sciatic nerve tubulin after 2 weeks of diabetes. We also identified an altered electrophoretic mobility of brain actin from a cytoskeletal protein preparation from brain of 2 week and 6 week diabetic rats. An additional novel polypeptide was demonstrated with a slightly more acidic isoelectric point than actin that could be immunostained with anti-actin antibodies. The same polypeptide could be produced by incubation of purified actin with glucose in vitro, thus identifying it as a product of nonenzymatic glycation. These results are discussed in relation to data from a clinical study of diabetic patients in which we identified increased glycation of platelet actin. STZ-diabetes also led to an increase in the phosphorylation of spinal cord neurofilament proteins in vivo during 6 weeks of diabetes. This hyperphosphorylation along with a reduced activity of a neurofilament-associated protein kinase led to a reduced incorporation of32P into purified neurofilament proteins when they were incubated with32P-ATP in vitro. Our combined data show a number of posttranslation modifications of neuronal cytoskeletal proteins that may contribute to the altered axonal transport and subsequent nerve dysfunction in experimental diabetes.  相似文献   

5.
Changes in solubility and transport rate of cytoskeletal proteins during regeneration were studied in the motor fibers of the rat sciatic nerve. Nerves were injured by freezing at the midthigh level either 1-2 weeks before (experiment I) or 1 week after radioactive labeling of the spinal cord with L-[35S]methionine (experiment II). Labeled proteins in 6-mm consecutive segments of the nerve 2 weeks after labeling were analyzed following fractionation into soluble and insoluble populations with 1% Triton at 4 degrees C. When axonal transport of newly synthesized cytoskeleton was examined in the regenerating nerve in experiment I, a new faster component enriched in soluble tubulin and actin was observed that was not present in the control nerve. The rate of the slower main component containing most of the insoluble tubulin and actin together with neurofilament proteins was not affected. A smaller but significant peak of radioactivity enriched in soluble tubulin and actin was also detected ahead of the main peak when the response of the preexisting cytoskeleton was examined in experiment II. It is thus concluded that during regeneration changes in the organization take place in both the newly synthesized and the preexisting axonal cytoskeleton, resulting in a selective acceleration in rate of transport of soluble tubulin and actin.  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.
We examined the low molecular weight proteins transported with actin in the chicken sciatic nerve after injection of [35S]methionine into the lumbar spinal cord. A prominent component of slow axonal transport with apparent molecular mass 19 kDa comigrated on two-dimensional gels with chicken actin depolymerizing factor (ADF), previously shown to be a major actin-binding protein in brain. There was comparatively little radioactivity associated with the actin monomer sequestering proteins, profilin or cofilin, and examination of the rapid component of axonal transport failed to reveal appreciable quantities of actin, ADF, profilin, or cofilin. These results show that both actin and ADF are carried by slow axonal transport and raise the possibility that actin travels within the axon in an unpolymerized form in a complex with ADF.  相似文献   

8.
Fast and slow axonal transports were studied in the optic nerve of the garfish and compared with previous studies on the olfactory nerve. The composition of fast-transport proteins was very similar in the two nerves. Although the velocity of fast transport was slightly lower in the optic nerve, there was a linear increase in velocity with temperature in both nerves. As in the olfactory nerve, only a single wave of slow-transport protein radioactivity moves along the nerve. The velocity of slow transport also increased linearly with temperature, but the coefficient was less than in the olfactory system. The composition of slow transport in the optic nerve was significantly different from that in the olfactory nerve, a finding reflecting the different cytoskeletal constituents of the two types of axons. The slow wave could be differentiated into several subcomponents, with the order of velocities being a 105-kilodalton protein and actin greater than tubulins and clathrin greater than fodrin much greater than neurofilaments. It can be concluded that the temperature dependence of fast and slow axonal transport in different nerves reflects the influence of temperature on the individual polypeptides constituting the various transport phases. The garfish optic nerve preparation may be advantageous for studies of axonal transport in retinal ganglion cell axons, because its great length avoids the complications of having to study transport in the optic tract or in material accumulating at the tectum.  相似文献   

9.
The neuropathy associated with diabetes includes well documented impairment of axonal transport, a reduction in axon calibre and a reduced capacity for nerve regeneration. All of those aspects of nerve function rely on the integrity of the axonal cytoskeleton. Alterations in the axonal cytoskeleton in experimental diabetes include an insulin-dependent non-enzymatic glycation of actin that is reflected in increased glycation of platelet actin in the clinical situation. There is a reduced synthesis of mRNA for the isoforms of tubulin that are associated with nerve growth and regeneration and an elevated non-enzymatic glycation of peripheral nerve tubulin in both diabetic patients and diabetic animals. mRNAs for neurofilament proteins are selectively reduced in the diabetic rat and the post-translational modification of at least one of the neurofilament proteins is altered. There is some evidence that altered expression of isoforms of protein kinases may contribute to these changes.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Tubulin proteins in mouse retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons were analyzed to determine whether they undergo posttranslational processing during axoplasmic transport. Alpha- and beta-tubulin comprised heterogeneous proteins in the primary optic pathway (optic nerve and optic tract) when examined by two-dimensional (2D) PAGE. In addition, however, alpha-tubulin exhibited regional heterogeneity when consecutive 1.1-mm segments of the optic pathway were analyzed separately. In proximal segments, alpha-tubulin consisted of two predominant proteins separable by isoelectric point and several less abundant species. In more distal segments, these predominant proteins decreased progressively and the alpha-tubulin region of the gel was represented by less abundant multiple forms only; beta-tubulin region of the gel was represented by less abundant multiple forms only; beta- tubulin was the same in all segments. After intravitreal injection of [3H]proline to mice, radiolabeled alpha- and beta-tubulin heteroproteins were conveyed together at a rate of 0.1-0.2 mm/d in the slowest phase of axoplasmic transport. At 45 d postinjection, the distribution of radiolabeled heterogeneous forms a alpha- and beta- tubulin in consecutive segments of optic pathway resembled the distribution of unlabeled proteins by 2D PAGE, indicating that regional heterogeneity of tubulin arises during axonal transport. Peptide mapping studies demonstrated that the progressive alteration of alpha- tubulin revealed by PAGE analysis cannot be explained by contamination of the alpha-tubulin region by other proteins on gels. The results are consistent with the posttranslational processing of alpha-tubulin during axoplasmic transport. These observations, along with the accompanying report (J. Cell Biol., 1982, 94:150-158), provide additional evidence that CNS axons may be regionally specialized.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
To clarify the role of the neurofilament (NF) medium (NF-M) and heavy (NF-H) subunits, we generated mice with targeted disruption of both NF-M and NF-H genes. The absence of the NF-M subunit resulted in a two- to threefold reduction in the caliber of large myelinated axons, whereas the lack of NF-H subunits had little effect on the radial growth of motor axons. In NF-M-/- mice, the velocity of axonal transport of NF light (NF-L) and NF-H proteins was increased by about two-fold, whereas the steady-state levels of assembled NF-L were reduced. Although the NF-M or NF-H subunits are each dispensable for the formation of intermediate filaments, the absence of both subunits in double NF-M; NF-H knockout mice led to a scarcity of intermediate filament structures in axons and to a marked approximately twofold increase in the number of microtubules. Protein analysis indicated that the levels of NF-L and alpha-internexin proteins were reduced dramatically throughout the nervous system. Immunohistochemistry of spinal cord from the NF-M-/-;NF-H-/- mice revealed enhanced NF-L staining in the perikaryon of motor neurons but a weak NF-L staining in axons. In addition, axonal transport studies carried out by the injection of [35S]methionine into spinal cord revealed after 30 days very low levels of newly synthesized NF-L proteins in the sciatic nerve of NF-M-/-;NF-H-/- mice. The combined results demonstrate a requirement of the high-molecular-weight subunits for the assembly of type IV intermediate filament proteins and for the efficient translocation of NF-L proteins into the axonal compartment.  相似文献   

14.
The anterograde axonal transport of choline-phosphoglycerides was studied in sciatic nerve motoneurons of adult (3-month-old) and aged (24-month-old) rats. After the spinal cord injection of [2-3H]glycerol, choline-phosphoglycerides; the major phospholipid class was transported along the nerve. The axonal transport rate was determined by plotting the distance covered by the front of transported radioactivity as a function of the time employed. In aged animals the rate of the choline-phosphoglyceride anterograde axonal transport was about 68% lower than that of adults; furthermore, the rate slowed down along the nerve in the proximal-distal direction. This alterated axonal transport mechanism might contribute to the degenerative processes observed in distal regions of peripheral nerve fibers of aged animals.  相似文献   

15.
The fast axonal transport of proteins was studied in the cat sciatic nerve after injection of [3H]leucine into the spinal ganglion or the ventral horn of the seventh lumbar segment. The amount of transported proteins after ganglion injection was linearly related to the amount of label present at the ganglion. At variable intervals after ganglion or spinal cord injection, the sciatic nerves were sectioned in some experiments. The transport of proteins continued in the peripheral nerve stump in a wavelike manner, but the advancing wave leaves a labeled trail behind. A fraction of this trail corresponds to proteins moving at slower velocities than the velocity of proteins in the wave front. Another fraction of the trail corresponds to molecules retained by the axons. Each nerve segment of 5 mm in length retains 1.5% of the transported proteins, and the profile of retained proteins along the sciatic nerves follows a single exponential function. From the proportion of retained proteins, the concentration of transported proteins at the terminals of branching axons as a function of the branching ratio was estimated. In the case of motor axons innervating the soleus muscle of the cat, the concentration of recently transported proteins at the nerve terminals would be approximately 0.83% of the proteins leaving the spinal cord. This low concentration of transported proteins at the nerve terminals may explain the lability of neuromuscular synapses when axonal transport is decreased or interrupted.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Abstract: Retrograde axonal transport of phosphatidylcholine in the sciatic nerve has been demonstrated only after injection of lipid precursors into the cell body region. We now report, however, that after microinjection (1 μl) of [methyl-3H]choline chloride into the rat sciatic nerve (35-40 mm distal to the L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia), time-dependent accumulation of 3H-labeled material occurred in dorsal root ganglia ipsilateral, but not contralateral, to the injection site. The level of radioactivity in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia was minimal at 2 h after isotope injection but was significantly increased at 7, 24, 48, and 72 h after intraneural isotope injection (n = 3–8 per time point); at these time points, all of the radiolabel in the chloroform/methanol extract of the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia was present in phosphatidylcholine. The radioactivity in the water-soluble fraction did not show a time-dependent accumulation in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia as compared with the contralateral DRGs, ruling out transport or diffusion of precursor molecules. In addition, colchicine injection into the sciatic nerve proximal to the isotope injection site prevented the accumulation of radiolabel in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia. Therefore, this time-dependent accumulation of radiolabeled phosphatidylcholine in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia is most likely due to retrograde axonal transport of locally synthesized phospholipid material. Moreover, 24 h after injection of both [3H]choline and [35S]-methionine into the sciatic nerve, the ipsilateral/contralateral ratio of radiolabel was 11.7 for 3H but only 1.1 for 35S. indicating that only locally synthesized choline phospholipids, but not protein, were retrogradely transported.  相似文献   

18.
Cytoskeletal proteins-neurofilament polypeptides, tubulin and actin-are transported along axons by slow transport. How or in what form they are transported is not known. One hypothesis is that they are assembled into the cytoskeleton at the cell body and transported as intact polymers down the axon. However, recent radiolabeling and photobleaching studies have shown that tubulin and actin exist in both a mobile phase and a stationary phase in the axon. Consequently, it is more likely that cytoskeletal proteins move along the axon in some form of transport complex and are assembled into a cytoskeleton which is stationary. In this overview we discuss these topics and consider the evidence for the existence of transport complexes associated with slow axonal flow. Such evidence includes the slow transport of particulate complexes containing tubulin and neurofilament polypeptides along reconstituted microtubules in vitro, and the coordinate slow transport of actin with actin-binding in vivo.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Lawrence Austin.  相似文献   

19.
Proteins synthesized by soma located in L4 dorsal root ganglia and supplied to the axonal branches extending centrally in the dorsal root and peripherally towards the sciatic nerve were analyzed for radioactivity following injections of [3H] leucine into the L4 dorsal root ganglia. All proteins located in the dorsal root and sciatic nerve were analyzed by SDS acrylamide gel electrophoresis at various times post injection. The differences in radioactivity between the dorsal root and sciatic nerve proteins were mainly quantitative and not qualitative, with many proteins of various molecular weight ranges being transported into both segments. Generally, it appears that in both axonal branches the high molecular weight proteins are transported at the highest rate, medium weights slower and low molecular weight proteins slowest. More proteins of high and low molecular weights are transported into the dorsal root whereas more of those of medium molecular weight are transported towards the sciatic nerve.  相似文献   

20.
Proteins synthesized by soma located in L4 dorsal root ganglia and supplied to the axonal branches extending centrally in the dorsal root and peripherally towards the sciatic nerve were analyzed for radioactivity following injections of [3H] leucine into the L4 dorsal root ganglia. All proteins located in the dorsal root and sciatic nerve were analyzed by SDS acrylamide gel electrophoresis at various times post injection. The differences in radioactivity between the dorsal root and sciatic nerve proteins were mainly quantitative and not qualitative, with many proteins of various molecular weight ranges being transported into both segments. Generally, it appears that in both axonal branches the high molecular weight proteins are transported at the highest rate, medium weights slower and low molecular weight proteins slowest. More proteins of high and low molecular weights are transported into the dorsal root whereas more of those of medium molecular weight are transported towards the sciatic nerve.  相似文献   

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