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1.
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   

2.
Antimitotic drugs are chemotherapeutic agents that bind tubulin and microtubules. Resistance to these drugs is a major clinical problem. One hypothesis is that the cellular composition of tubulin isotypes may predict the sensitivity of a tumor to antimitotics. Reliable and sensitive methods for measuring tubulin isotype levels in cells and tissues are needed to address this hypothesis. Quantitative measurements of tubulin isotypes have frequently relied upon inferring protein amounts from mRNA levels. To determine whether this approach is justified, protein and mRNA levels of beta-tubulin isotypes from 12 human cancer cell lines were measured. This work focused on only beta-tubulin isotypes because we had readily available monoclonal antibodies for quantitative immunoblots. The percentage of beta-tubulin isotype classes I, II, III, and IVa + IVb mRNA and protein were compared. For beta-tubulin class I that comprises >50% of the beta-tubulin protein in 10 of the 12 cell lines, there was good agreement between mRNA and protein percentages. Agreement between mRNA and protein was also found for beta-tubulin class III. For beta-tubulin classes IVa + IVb, we observed higher protein levels compared to mRNA levels.Beta-tubulin class II protein was found in only four cell lines and in very low abundance. We conclude that quantitative Western blotting is a reliable method for measuring tubulin isotype levels in human cancer cell lines. Inferring protein amounts from mRNA levels should be done with caution, since the correspondence is not one-to-one for all tubulin isotypes.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
beta-Tubulin is encoded in vertebrate genomes by a family of six to seven functional genes that produce six different polypeptide isotypes. We now document that although rat PC-12 cells express five of these isotypes, only two (classes II and III) accumulate significantly as a consequence of nerve growth factor-stimulated neurite outgrowth. In contrast to previous efforts that have failed to detect in vivo distinctions among different beta-tubulin isotypes, we demonstrate using immunoblotting with isotype-specific antibodies that three beta-tubulin polypeptides (classes I, II, and IV) are used preferentially for assembly of neurite microtubules (with approximately 70% of types I and II assembled but only approximately 50% of type III in polymer). Immunofluorescence localization shows that an additional isotype (V) is partially excluded from neurites. Distinctions in in vivo localization of the neuron-specific, class III isotype have also been directly observed using immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy. The sum of these efforts documents that some in vivo functional differences between tubulin isotypes do exist.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
In mammalian brain, beta-tubulin occurs as a mixture of four isotypes designated as types I, II, III, and IV. It has been speculated in recent years that the different tubulin isotypes may confer functional diversity to microtubules. In an effort to investigate whether different tubulin isotypes differ in their functional properties we have studied the colchicine binding kinetics of bovine brain tubulin upon removal of the beta III isotype. We found that the removal of the beta III isotype alters the binding kinetics from biphasic to monophasic with the disappearance of the slow phase. The kinetics become biphasic with the reappearance of the slow phase when the beta III-depleted tubulin was mixed with the beta III fraction eluted from the affinity column with 0.5 M NaCl. The analysis of the kinetic data reveals that the tubulin dimers containing beta III bind colchicine at an on-rate constant of 35 M-1 s-1 while those lacking beta III bind at 182 M-1 s-1. Our results strongly suggest that the beta-subunit plays a very important role in the interaction of tubulin with colchicine.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
Pluripotent P19 embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells were differentiated along the neuronal and muscle pathways. Comparisons of class I, II, III, and IV beta tubulin isotypes in total and colchicine-stable microtubule (MT) arrays from uncommitted EC, neuronal, and muscle cells were made by immunoblotting and by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. In undifferentiated EC cells the relative amounts of these four isotypes are the same in both the total and stable MT populations. Subcellular sorting of beta tubulin isotypes was demonstrated in both neuronal and muscle differentiated cells. During neuronal differentiation, class II beta tubulin is preferentially incorporated into the colchicine-stable MTs while class III beta tubulin is preferentially found in the colchicine-labile MTs. The subcellular sorting of class II into stable MTs correlates with the increased staining of MAP 1B, and with the expression of MAP 2C and tau. Although muscle differentiated cells express class II beta tubulin, stable MTs in these cells do not preferentially incorporate this isotype but instead show increased incorporation of class IV beta tubulin. Muscle cells do not show high levels of MAP 1B and do not express MAP 2C or tau. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that a subcellular sorting of tubulin isotypes is the result of a complex interaction between tubulin isotypes and MT-associated proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Mammalian brain tubulin consists of several isotypes of alpha and beta subunits that separate on polyacrylamide gels into three electrophoretic classes, designated alpha, beta 1, and beta 2. It has not been possible hitherto to resolve the different isotypes in a functional form. To this end, we have now isolated a monoclonal antibody, using as an immunogen a chemically synthesized peptide corresponding to the carboxyl-terminal sequence of the major tubulin isotype (type II) found in the beta 1-tubulin electrophoretic fraction. The antibody binds to beta 1 but not to alpha or beta 2. When pure tubulin from bovine brain is passed through an immunoaffinity column made from the anti-type II antibody, the tubulin that elutes in the unbound fraction is enriched greatly for the beta 2 electrophoretic variant. The tubulin that binds to the column appears to contain only alpha and beta 1, not beta 2. When these tubulin fractions are characterized by immunoblotting using the anti-type II antibody, the antibody binds only to the beta 1 band in the bound fraction, not to the beta 1 band in the unbound fraction. Using polyclonal antibodies generated against the carboxyl-termini of types I, III, and IV, we demonstrate that the beta 1 electrophoretic species is comprised of isotypes I, II, and IV, whereas the beta 2 variant is comprised exclusively of type III beta-tubulin. Further, we calculate that beta-tubulin in purified bovine brain tubulin is comprised of 3% type I, 58% type II, 25% type III, and 13% type IV tubulins.  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.
The insertion of axonally transported fucosyl glycoproteins into the axolemma of regenerating nerve sprouts was examined in rat sciatic motor axons at intervals after nerve crush. [(3)H]Fucose was injected into the lumbar ventral horns and the nerves were removed at intervals between 1 and 14 d after labeling. To follow the fate of the “pulse- labeled” glycoproteins, we examined the nerves by correlative radiometric and EM radioautographic approaches. The results showed, first, that rapidly transported [(3)H]fucosyl glycoproteins were inserted into the axolemma of regenerating sprouts as well as parent axons. At 1 d after delivery, in addition to the substantial mobile fraction of radioactivity still undergoing bidirectional transport within the axon, a fraction of label was already associated with the axolemma. Insertion of labeled glycoproteins into the sprout axolemma appeared to occur all along the length of the regenerating sprouts, not just in sprout terminals. Once inserted, labeled glycoproteins did not undergo extensive redistribution, nor did they appear in sprout regions that formed (as a result of continued outgrowth) after their insertion. The amount of radioactivity in the regenerating nerves decreased with time, in part as a result of removal of transported label by retrograde transport. By 7-14 d after labeling, radioautography showed that almost all the remaining radioactivity was associated with axolemma. The regenerating sprouts retained increased amounts of labeled glycoproteins; 7 or 14 d after labeling, the regenerating sprouts had over twice as much of radioactivity as comparable lengths of control nerves or parent axons. One role of fast axonal transport in nerve regeneration is the contribution to the regenerating sprout of glycoproteins inserted into the axolemma; these membrane elements are added both during longitudinal outgrowth and during lateral growth and maturation of the sprout.  相似文献   

14.
Isotypes of vertebrate tubulin have variable amino acid sequences, which are clustered at their C-terminal ends. Isotypes bind colchicine at different on-rates and affinity constants. The kinetics of colchicine binding to purified (unfractionated) brain tubulin have been reported to be biphasic under pseudo-first-order conditions. Experiments with individual isotypes established that the presence of beta(III) in the purified tubulin is responsible for the biphasic kinetics. Because the isotypes mainly differ at the C termini, the colchicine-binding kinetics of unfractionated tubulin and the beta(III) isotype, cleaved at the C termini, have been tested under pseudo-first-order conditions. Removal of the C termini made no difference to the nature of the kinetics. Sequence alignment of different beta isotypes of tubulin showed that besides the C-terminal region, there are differences in the main body as well. To establish whether these differences lie at the colchicine-binding site or not, homology modeling of all beta-tubulin isotypes was done. We found that the isotypes differed from each other in the amino acids located near the A ring of colchicine at the colchicine-binding site on beta tubulin. While the beta(III) isotype has two hydrophilic residues (serine(242) and threonine(317)), both beta(II) and beta(IV) have two hydrophobic residues (leucine(242) and alanine(317)). beta(II) has isoleucine at position 318, while beta(III) and beta(IV) have valine at that position. Thus, these alterations in the nature of the amino acids surrounding the colchicine site could be responsible for the different colchicine-binding kinetics of the different isotypes of tubulin.  相似文献   

15.
Compartmentalization of beta-tubulin isotypes within cells according to function was examined in gerbil olfactory and respiratory epithelia by using specific antibodies to four beta-tubulin isotypes (beta(I), beta(II), beta(III), and beta(IV)). Isotype synthesis was cell-type-specific, but the localization of the isotypes was not compartmentalized. All four isotypes were found in the cilia, dendrites, somata, and axons of olfactory neurons. Only two isotypes (beta(I) and beta(IV)) were present in the cilia of nasal respiratory epithelial cells. The beta(IV) isotype, thought to be an essential component of cilia, was present in olfactory neurons and respiratory epithelial cells, which are ciliated, but was not found in basal cells (the stem cells of olfactory sensory neurons, which have no cilia). Olfactory neurons therefore do not synthesize beta(IV)-tubulin until they mature, when functioning cilia are also elaborated. The failure to observe compartmentalization of beta-tubulin isotypes in olfactory neurons sheds new light on potential functions of the beta-tubulin isotypes.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in the amounts of tubulin, actin, and neurofilament polypeptides were found in regenerating motoneurons of grass frogs during the period of axonal elongation. Ventral roots 9 and 10 were transected unilaterally about 7 mm from the spinal cord. 35 d later, [3H]colchicine binding had decreased in the proximal stumps to approximately one-half of contralateral control values, well before the regenerating motor axons had reinnervated skeletal muscles of the hind limb. [3H]colchicine binding did not change significantly in the operated halves of the 9th and 10th spinal cord segments over a 75-d period. The relative amounts of actin, tubulin, and neurofilament polypeptides in the operated ventral roots were measured by quantitative densitometry of stained two-dimensional electrophoretic gels. Alpha-tubulin, beta-tubulin, and the 68,000 molecular weight subunit of neurofilaments (NF68) decreased within the transected ventral roots to 78%, 57%, and less than 15% of control values, respectively. The amount of actin increased to 132% of control values within the operated ventral roots, although this change was not statistically significant. Opposite changes were found within motoneuronal cell bodies isolated from the spinal cord. The relative amounts of alpha-tubulin, beta-tubulin and NF68 within axotomized perikarya increased, respectively, to 191%, 146%, and 144% of that in control perikarya isolated from the contralateral side of the spinal cord. Thus, the changes in NF68 and tubulin did not occur uniformly throughout the injured cells. The possible structural and functional consequences of these changes are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Biochemical methods were used to study the time course of transport of choline phospholipids (labeled by the injection of [3H]choline into the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord) in rat sciatic nerve. Autoradiographic methods were used to localize the transported lipid within motor axons. Transported phospholipid, primarily phosphatidylcholine, present in the nerve at 6 h, continued to accumulate over the following 12 days. No discrete waves of transported lipid were observed (a small wave of radioactive phospholipid moving at the high rate would have been missed); the amounts of radioactive lipid increased uniformly along the entire sciatic nerve. In light-microscope autoradiographs, a class of large-caliber axons, presumably motor axons, retained the labeled lipid. Some lipid, even at 6 h, was seen within the myelin sheaths. Later, the labeling of the myelin relative to axon increased. The continued accumulation of choline phospholipids in the axons probably signifies their prolonged release from cell bodies and their retention in various axonal membranes, including the axolemma. The build-up of these phospholipids in myelin probably represents their transfer from the axons to the myelin sheaths surrounding them. When nerves are crushed and allowed to regenerate for 6 or 12 days, choline phospholipids transported during these times enter the regenerating nerve. In light and electron microscope autoradiographs, transported lipid was seen to be localized primarily in the regenerating axons. However, grains overlay the adjacent Schwann cell cytoplasm, indicating transported lipids were transferred from the regenerating axons to the associated Schwann cells. In addition, some cells not associated with growing axons were labeled, suggesting that phosphatidylcholine and possibly acetylcholine, carried to the regenerating axons by axonal transport, were actively metabolized in the terminal, with released choline label being used by other cells. These results demonstrate that axonal transport supplies mature and growing axons and their glial cells with choline phospholipids.  相似文献   

18.
In a previous study, three successive groups of regenerative fibers, growing initially at 5.8, 2.1, and 0.8 mm/day, were observed in the regenerating garfish olfactory nerve. In the present study, fast axonal transport in the most rapidly regenerating axons (phase I and II) has been examined. Rapid transport in phase I fibers occurs at a velocity of 208 +/- 9 mm/day at 23 degrees, a rate identical to that measured in intact nerves. This first phase of regenerating fibers represents only 3 to 5% of the original axonal population, but each fiber appears to contain 6 to 16 times more transported radioactivity than an axon in an intact nerve. Subcellular distribution of rapidly moving material in phase I and II fibers was closely related to the distribution obtained in intact nerves. Small but significant differences indicate a shift of the transported radioactivity from a heavier to a light axonal membranous fraction. This shift might be characteristic of the immature membrane of a growing axon. The polypeptide distribution of transported radioactivity was also very similar to that of a normal nerve, with most of the radioactivity associated with high-molecular-weight polypeptides.  相似文献   

19.
20.
In chicken, beta-tubulin is encoded by a family of seven genes. We have now isolated and sequenced overlapping cDNA clones corresponding to gene c beta 7 (previously designated c beta 4'), the only chicken beta-tubulin not previously characterized. The inferred amino acid sequence of c beta 7 tubulin is identical with the class I beta-tubulin isotype found in human, mouse and rat. Moreover, c beta 7 is highly expressed in almost all tissue and cell types in chicken, a pattern similar to those of the genes for class I beta-tubulin isotypes in other vertebrates. Comparison of the complete family of chicken beta-tubulin gene sequences reveals that the heterogeneity of beta-tubulin polypeptides encoded in a higher eukaryote is confined to six distinct beta-tubulin isotypes. Five of these are members of evolutionarily conserved isotypic classes (I to V), whereas the sixth represents a divergent erythroid-specific tubulin whose sequence has not been conserved.  相似文献   

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