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1.
Autoradiographic studies combined with digestion tests of incorporated 3H-uridine showed that the peripheral nerve of Triturus contains ribonucleic acid. Localization studies revealed the presence of RNA in the axon, in the myelin and Schwann sheath, and in the Schwann cell body. Similar experiments on nerve separated by transection from its neuronal cell bodies yielded the same results. They showed that RNA of the nerve can be synthesized without the intervention of the neuronal cell body. The results strongly suggest that the radioactive substance, precursor or RNA, is transported inward from the Schwann cell to be deposited in the myelin sheath and axon. The route of passage and the possible sites of origin of the RNA in the nerve are discussed. A significant role is suggested for the Schmidt-Lantermann cleft because of its relations with the adaxonal layer of Schwann cytoplasm and with the myelin leaflets.  相似文献   

2.
The ultrastructure of substance P (SP)-containing axon terminals in the mucosa of the human urinary bladder was studied. Numerous SP-immunoreactive varicose nerve fibers were seen in the lamina propria, and most of them ran freely in the connective tissue. Many SP-immunoreactive nerve fibers were observed beneath the epithelium, and perivascular SP-immunoreactive nerves were also found in the submucosal layer. We observed a total of 305 SP-immunoreactive (IR) axon terminals, of which most (89.6%) were free nerve endings at the ultrastructural level; the rest of the SR-IR axon terminale were seen in the vicinity of the epithelium and blood vessels in the lamina propria. Varicose regions of SP-IR axon terminals contained large granular and small agranular synaptic vesicles, and most of them partially lacked a Schwann cell sheath. In some SP-IR varicosities, synaptic vesicles were concentrated in the region without any Schwann cell sheath. Long storage (for more than 1 month) of fixed-tissue pieces in sucrose before freezing has improved the ultrastructure of cryostat sections in pre-embedding immunohistochemistry. Trypsin digestion for the purpose of exposing antigenic sites was also employed before applying the first antiserum.  相似文献   

3.
The actions of grayanotoxin I, veratrine, and tetrodotoxin on the membrane potential of the Schwann cell were studied in the giant nerve fiber of the squid Sepioteuthis sepioidea. Schwann cells of intact nerve fibers and Schwann cells attached to axons cut lengthwise over several millimeters were utilized. The axon membrane potential in the intact nerve fibers was also monitored. The effects of grayanotoxin I and veratrine on the membrane potential of the Schwann cell were found to be similar to those they produce on the resting membrane potential of the giant axon. Thus, grayanotoxin I (1-30 muM) and veratrine (5-50 mug-jl-1), externally applied to the intact nerve fiber or to axon-free nerve fiber sheaths, produce a Schwann cell depolarization which can be reversed by decreasing the external sodium concentration or by external application of tetrodotoxin. The magnitude of these membrane potential changes is related to the concentrations of the drugs in the external medium. These results indicate the existence of sodium pathways in the electrically unexcitable Schwann cell membrane of S. sepioidea, which can be opened up by grayanotoxin I and veratrine, and afterwards are blocked by tetrodotoxin. The sodium pathways of the Schwann cell membrane appear to be different from those of the axolemma which show a voltage-dependent conductance.  相似文献   

4.
Innervation of the ultimobranchial glands in the chicken was investigated by immunohistochemistry, fluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy. The nerve fibers distributed in ultimobranchial glands were clearly visualized by immunoperoxidase staining with antiserum to neurofilament triplet proteins (200K-, 150K- and 68K-dalton) extracted from chicken peripheral nerves. The ultimobranchial glands received numerous nerve fibers originating from both the recurrent laryngeal nerves and direct vagal branches. The left and right sides of the ultimobranchial region were asymmetrical. The left ultimobranchial gland had intimate contact with the vagus nerve trunk, especially with the distal vagal ganglion, but was somewhat separated from the recurrent nerve. The right gland touched the recurrent nerve, the medial edge being frequently penetrated by the nerve, but the gland was separated from the vagal trunk. The left gland was innervated mainly by the branches from the distal vagal ganglion, whereas the right gland received mostly the branches from the recurrent nerve. The carotid body was located cranially near to the ultimobranchial gland. Large nerve bundles in the ultimobranchial gland ran toward and entered into the carotid body. By fluorescence microscopy, nerve fibers in ultimobranchial glands were observed associated with blood vessels. Only a few fluorescent nerve fibers were present in close proximity to C cell groups; the C cells of ultimobranchial glands may receive very few adrenergic sympathetic fibers. By electron microscopy, numerous axons ensheathed with Schwann cell cytoplasm were in close contact with the surfaces of C cells. In addition, naked axons regarded as axon terminals or "en passant" synapses came into direct contact with C cells. The morphology of these axon terminals and synaptic endings suggest that ultimobranchial C cells of chickens are supplied mainly with cholinergic efferent type fibers. In the region where large nerve bundles and complex ramifications of nerve fibers were present, Schwann cell perikarya investing the axons were closely juxtaposed with C cells; long cytoplasmic processes of Schwann cells encompassed large portions of the cell surface. All of these features suggest that C-cell activity, i.e., secretion of hormones and catecholamines, may be regulated by nerve stimuli.  相似文献   

5.
Muscle biopsy homogenates contain GLUT-3 mRNA and protein. Before these studies, it was unclear where GLUT-3 was located in muscle tissue. In situ hybridization using a midmolecule probe demonstrated GLUT-3 within all muscle fibers. Fluorescent-tagged antibody reacting with affinity-purified antibody directed at the carboxy-terminus demonstrated GLUT-3 protein in all fibers. Slow-twitch muscle fibers, identified by NADH-tetrazolium reductase staining, possessed more GLUT-3 protein than fast-twitch fibers. Electron microscopy using affinity-purified primary antibody and gold particle-tagged second antibody showed that the majority of GLUT-3 was in association with triads and transverse tubules inside the fiber. Strong GLUT-3 signals were seen in association with the few nerves that traversed muscle sections. Electron microscopic evaluation of human peripheral nerve demonstrated GLUT-3 within the axon, with many of the particles related to mitochondria. GLUT-3 protein was found in myelin but not in Schwann cells. GLUT-1 protein was not present in nerve cells, axons, myelin, or Schwann cells but was seen at the surface of the peripheral nerve in the perineurium. These studies demonstrated that GLUT-3 mRNA and protein are expressed throughout normal human skeletal muscle, but the protein is predominantly found in the triads of slow-twitch muscle fibers.  相似文献   

6.
The neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) is a membrane glycoprotein involved in neuron-neuron and neuron-muscle adhesion. It can be synthesized in various forms by both nerve and muscle and it becomes concentrated at the motor endplate. Biochemical analysis of a frog muscle extract enriched in basal lamina revealed the presence of a polydisperse, polysialylated form of N-CAM with an average Mr of approximately 160,000 as determined by SDS-PAGE, which was converted to a form of 125,000 Mr by treatment with neuraminidase. To define further the role of N-CAM in neuromuscular junction organization, we studied the distribution of N-CAM in an in vivo preparation of frog basal lamina sheaths obtained by inducing the degeneration of both nerve and muscle fibers. Immunoreactive material could be readily detected by anti-N-CAM antibodies in such basal lamina sheaths. Ultrastructural analysis using immunogold techniques revealed N-CAM in close association with the basal lamina sheaths, present in dense accumulation at places that presumably correspond to synaptic regions. N-CAM epitopes were also associated with collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix. The ability of anti-N-CAM antibodies to perturb nerve regeneration and reinnervation of the remaining basal lamina sheaths was then examined. In control animals, myelinating Schwann cells wrapped around the regenerated axon and reinnervation occurred only at the old synaptic areas; new contacts between nerve and basal lamina had a terminal Schwann cell capping the nerve terminal. In the presence of anti-N-CAM antibodies, three major abnormalities were observed in the regeneration and reinnervation processes: (a) regenerated axons in nerve trunks that had grown back into the old Schwann cell basal lamina were rarely associated with myelinating Schwann cell processes, (b) ectopic synapses were often present, and (c) many of the axon terminals lacked a terminal Schwann cell capping the nerve-basal lamina contact area. These results suggest that N-CAM may play an important role not only in the determination of synaptic areas but also in Schwann cell-axon interactions during nerve regeneration.  相似文献   

7.
Localization of Phospholipid Synthesis to Schwann Cells and Axons   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1  
Quantitative electron microscopic autoradiography was used to detect and characterize endoneurial sites of lipid synthesis in mouse sciatic nerve. Six tritiated phospholipid precursors (choline, serine, methionine, inositol, glycerol, and ethanolamine) and a protein precursor (proline) were individually injected into exposed nerves and after 2 h the mice were perfused with buffered aldehyde. The labeled segments of nerve were prepared for autoradiography with procedures that selectively remove nonincorporated precursors and other aqueous metabolites, while preserving nerve lipids (and proteins). At both the light and electron microscope levels, the major site of phospholipid and protein synthesis was the crescent-shaped perinuclear cytoplasm of myelinating Schwann cells. Other internodal Schwann cell cytoplasm, including that in surface channels, Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, and paranodal regions, was less well labeled than the perinuclear region. Newly formed proteins were selectively located in the Schwann cell nucleus. Lipid and protein formation was also detected in unmyelinated fiber bundles and in endoneurial and perineurial cells. Tritiated inositol was selectively incorporated into phospholipids in both myelinated axons and unmyelinated fibers. Like inositol, glycerol incorporation appeared particularly active in unmyelinated fibers. Quantitative autoradiographic analyses substantiated the following points: myelinating Schwann cells dominate phospholipid and protein synthesis, myelinated axons selectively incorporate tritiated inositol, phospholipid precursors label myelin sheaths and myelinated axons better than proline.  相似文献   

8.
Ultrastructural localization of laminin in rat sensory ganglia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We adapted immunocytochemical methods for localization of laminin to examine its disposition in neural tissue at the ultrastructural level. In dorsal root ganglia, laminin was found in basal laminae of the satellite and Schwann cells ensheathing neuronal perikarya and nerve fibers, respectively, and around blood vessels. Within the basal lamina, the immunostain was found in the lamina lucida and lamina densa. Occasional immunostained coated pits were identified in satellite and Schwann cells, but virtually no intracellular label was seen even in freeze-thawed/detergent-permeabilized specimens. In the perineurium, only the basal lamina of the inward-facing surface of the inner-most cell layer was usually stained.  相似文献   

9.
Gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), an amino acid transport enzyme, was investigated in normal and degenerated sciatic nerve of rat. The enzyme activity, which is considered to be a marker for cerebrovascular endothelium, was found to be absent in microvessels of normal and degenerated nerves. In the perineurium of normal nerve, GGT activity was faint, while in degenerated nerve, it increased. The most striking finding of this study was the observation of GGT activity at the paranode of each normal myelinated axon. It is interesting that after axotomy (8 weeks), no GGT activity was observed in the Schwann cells of degenerated nerve. Thus, Schwann cell plasmalemma contributed to GGT staining only when this cell was in contact with an axon mature enough to cause it to produce myelin. We conclude that, in peripheral nerve, transmembrane amino acid transport is apparently regional and associated with the paranodal region of myelinated nerve fibers.  相似文献   

10.
The myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) is an integral membrane glycoprotein that is located in the periaxonal membrane of myelin-forming Schwann cells. On the basis of this localization, it has been hypothesized that MAG plays a structural role in (a) forming and maintaining contact between myelinating Schwann cells and the axon (the 12-14-nm periaxonal space) and (b) maintaining the Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar of myelinated fibers. To test this hypothesis, we have determined the immunocytochemical localization of MAG in the L4 ventral roots from 11-mo-old quaking mice. These roots display various stages in the association of remyelinating Schwann cells with axons, and abnormalities including loss of the Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar and dilation of the periaxonal space of myelinated fibers. Therefore, this mutant provides distinct opportunities to observe the relationships between MAG and (a) the formation of the periaxonal space during remyelination and (b) the maintenance of the periaxonal space and Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar in myelinated fibers. During association of remyelinating Schwann cells and axons, MAG was detected in Schwann cell adaxonal membranes that apposed the axolemma by 12-14 nm. Schwann cell plasma membranes separated from the axolemma by distances greater than 12-14 nm did not react with MAG antiserum. MAG was present in adaxonal Schwann cell membranes that apposed the axolemma by 12-14 nm but only partially surrounded the axon and, therefore, may be actively involved in the ensheathment of axons by remyelinating Schwann cells. To test the dual role of MAG in maintaining the periaxonal space and Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar of myelinated fibers, we determined the immunocytochemical localization of MAG in myelinated quaking fibers that displayed pathological alterations of these structures. Where Schwann cell periaxonal membranes were not stained by MAG antiserum, the cytoplasmic side of the periaxonal membrane was "fused" with the cytoplasmic side of the inner compact myelin lamella and formed a major dense line. This loss of MAG and the Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar usually resulted in enlargement of the 12-14-nm periaxonal space and ruffling of the apposing axolemma. In myelinated fibers, there was a strict correlation between the presence of MAG in the Schwann cell periaxonal membrane and (a) maintenance of the 12-14-nm periaxonal space, and (b) presence of the Schwann cell periaxonal cytoplasmic collar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The view is commonly held that the exclusive source of axonal substance is the neuronal cell body. The results of the present study, employing techniques of light and electron microscope autoradiography, indicate that substances of metabolic importance may reach the axon from intercellular fluids by way of the Schwann and myelin sheath. Tritiated l-histidine was injected intraperitoneally into the newt, Triturus viridescens, and the label was found in the Schwann cell body, myelin,
  • 1 We use the terms myelin and myelin sheath synonymously, as generally employed in modern anatomical literature, for the array of packed Schwann cell wrappings around the axon of the peripheral nerve fiber. In biochemical literature the term myelin is used rather loosely sometimes to imply the chemical substratum of the myelin sheath or its lipoidal fraction.
  • and axoplasm. Nerve separated by transection from its neuronal cell bodies was labeled about as densely as intact nerve. Moreover, pieces of nerve immersed in the isotope also incorporated the labeled molecule. These results have led us to reassess traditional views of the function of the sheaths surrounding the axon.  相似文献   

    12.
    Immunocytochemical demonstration of protein kinase C (PKC) subspecies (alpha, beta, gamma) was carried out in Pacinian corpuscles of rat hind feet using monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against each of these subspecies. The inner core cells and lamellae and the Schwann cell cytoplasm of the nerve fiber innervating the corpuscle were strongly positive for PKC alpha-immunoreactivity (IR). In contrast, the axon terminal and the outer core did not display any positive alpha-IR. Very weak PKC beta-IR was detected in the ultraterminal region of the axon terminal, while the trunk region showed no immunoreactivity. Very faint PKC beta-IR was found also in the lamellar cells located at the periphery of the inner core and the endoneurial fibroblasts in the intermediate layer. PKC gamma-IR was not detected in any part of the corpuscle. The strong PKC alpha-IR in the inner core and the presence or absence of PKC alpha-, beta-, and gamma-IR in the axon terminal are discussed from the point of view of the functional aspects of each part.  相似文献   

    13.
    Tullidinol, a neurotoxin extracted from the Karwinskia humboldtiana fruit, dissolved in peanut oil was injected into the right sciatic nerve of adult cats. The contralateral sciatic nerve received an equivalent volume of peanut oil alone. The fast axonal transport of labeled ([3H]Leucine) protein was studied in sensory and motor axons of both sciatic nerves. The radioactive label was pressure injected either into the L7 dorsal root ganglion or the ventral region of the same spinal cord segment. Several days after the toxin injection, the cat limped and the Achilles tendon reflex was nearly absent in the right hind limb. The amount of transported label was decreased distal to the site of toxin injection. Proximal to this site, the transported material was dammed. Sensory and motor axons showed similar changes. In addition, the toxin produced demyelination and axonal degeneration. Axonal transport and the structure of the axons were normal in the contralateral nerve. Both, Schwann cells and axons of the right sciatic nerve showed globular inclusions, presumably oil droplets containing the toxin. We conclude that Schwann cells and axons as well are tullidinol targets.Departamento de Química. Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Sidney Ochs.  相似文献   

    14.
    Sectioned dorsal giant fibers of the earthworm Eisenia foetida have been studied with the electron microscope. The giant axon is surrounded by a Schwannian sheath in which the lamellae are arranged spirally. They can be traced from the outer surface of the Schwann cell to the axon-Schwann membranes. Irregularities in the spiral arrangement are frequently observed. Desmosome-like attachment areas occur on the giant fiber nerve sheath. These structures appear to be arranged bilaterally in columns which are oriented slightly obliquely to the long axis of the giant fiber and aligned linearly from the axon to the periphery of the sheath. At these sites they bind together apposing portions of Schwann cell membrane comprising the sheath. Longitudinal or oblique sections of the nerve sheath attachment areas are reminiscent of the Schmidt-Lantermann clefts of vertebrate peripheral nerve. Septa of the giant fibers have been examined. They are symmetrical or non-polarized and consist of the two plasma membranes of adjacent nerve units. Characteristic vesicular and tubular structures are associated with both cytoplasmic surfaces of these septa.  相似文献   

    15.
    A time-sequence study of the incorporation and distribution of cholesterol in peripheral nerve myelin was carried out by electron microscope autoradiography. [1,2-3H]Cholesterol was injected into 10-day old mice and the sciatic nerves were dissected out at 10, 20, 40, 60, 90, 120, and 180 min after the injection. 20 min after injection the higher densities of grains due to the presence of [3H]cholesterol were confined to the outer and inner edges of the myelin sheath. Practically no cholesterol was detected in the midzone of the myelin sheath. 1 ½ h after injection, cholesterol showed a wider distribution within the myelin sheath, the higher densities of grains occurring over the two peripheral myelin bands, each approximately 3,100 Å wide. Cholesterol was also present in the center of the myelin sheath but to a considerably lesser extent. 3 h after injection cholesterol appeared homogeneously distributed within the myelin sheath. Schwann cell and axon compartments were also labeled at each time interval studied beginning 20 min postinjection. These observations indicate that preformed cholesterol enters myelin first and almost simultaneously through the inner and outer edges of the sheath; only after 90 min does the density of labeled cholesterol in the central zone of myelin reach the same density as that in the outer and inner zones. These findings suggest that cholesterol used by the nerve fibers in the formation and maintenance of the myelin sheath enters the lamellae from the Schwann cell cytoplasm and from the axon. The possibility of a bidirectional movement of molecules, i.e. from the Schwann cell to the axon and from the axon to the Schwann cell through the myelin sheath, is noted. The results are discussed in the light of recent observations on the exchange, reutilization, and transaxonal movement of cholesterol.  相似文献   

    16.
    Sectioned dorsal giant fibers of the earthworm Eisenia foetida have been studied with the electron microscope. The giant axon is surrounded by a Schwannian sheath in which the lamellae are arranged spirally. They can be traced from the outer surface of the Schwann cell to the axon-Schwann membranes. Irregularities in the spiral arrangement are frequently observed. Desmosome-like attachment areas occur on the giant fiber nerve sheath. These structures appear to be arranged bilaterally in columns which are oriented slightly obliquely to the long axis of the giant fiber and aligned linearly from the axon to the periphery of the sheath. At these sites they bind together apposing portions of Schwann cell membrane comprising the sheath. Longitudinal or oblique sections of the nerve sheath attachment areas are reminiscent of the Schmidt-Lantermann clefts of vertebrate peripheral nerve. Septa of the giant fibers have been examined. They are symmetrical or non-polarized and consist of the two plasma membranes of adjacent nerve units. Characteristic vesicular and tubular structures are associated with both cytoplasmic surfaces of these septa.  相似文献   

    17.
    Incorporation of newly formed lecithin into peripheral nerve myelin   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
    Radioactive choline was used to study the metabolism and movement of choline-containing phospholipids in peripheral nerve myelin of adult mice. Incorporation at various times after intraperitoneal injection was measured in serial segments of sciatic nerve as well as in myelin isolated from those segments. At no time (1 h to 35 days) could a proximal-distal difference in the extent of labeling be demonstrated. This finding suggests that incorporation of precursor choline phospholipids into nerve membranes is a local event, with little contribution from the neuronal perikaryon via axoplasmic transport. Autoradiographic investigations were undertaken to elucidate the pattern of movement of radioactive choline-labeled phospholipids, predominantly lecithin, into the myelin sheaths of the sciatic nerve. A sequence of autoradiographs was prepared from animals sacrificed between 20 min and 35 days after a microinjection of precursor directly into the nerve. Analysis of these autoradiograms revealed that labeling is initially concentrated in the Schwann cell cytoplasm. Later, the label moves first into the outer regions of the myelin sheaths and is eventually distributed evenly throughout the inner and outer layers of the sheath. At no time is there a build-up of label in the axon. The rate of uptake of precursor and subsequent redistribution of lecithin into the myelin were also examined in frog sciatic nerve (18 degrees C). Both uptake and redistribution processes were considerably slower in the cold-blooded animal.  相似文献   

    18.
    The turnover of phospholipids was compared in peripheral nerves of Trembler dysmelinating mutant and control mice, after intraperitoneal and local injection of labeled ethanolamine. In the mutant sciatic nerve, neurochemical analysis showed that [14C]ethanolamine is incorporated into EGP (ethanolamine glycerophospholipids) of the sciatic nerve at a much higher rate in Trembler mutant than in control mice. Furthermore the decay rate of 14C-labeled EGP is faster in Trembler than in normal animals. The accelerated turnover of EGP in Trembler sciatic nerve affects the diacyl-EGP while the renewal of the alkenylacyl-EGP (plasmalogens) is slower than in controls. Quantitative radioautographic study at the ultrastructural level corroborate that the initial increase of the label in Trembler nerve fibers was different in axons, Schwann cells and myelin sheaths. EM radioautographs reveal indeed that the high label content observed in Trembler axons takes place preferentially in the myelinated portions of axons and drops within 1 week. In both myelinated and unmyelinated segments of the axons, the majority of the radioactivity was contained in axolemma and smooth axoplasmic reticulum. The 10-fold increase of label found in the myelin sheath of Trembler nerve fibers at 1 day raises the question of the origin of the labeled EGP, either by a stimulated synthesis in Schwann cells or by transfer from axonally transported phospholipids. In contrast, the label of axons, Schwann cells and myelin sheaths of control nerve remains stable during the same period.  相似文献   

    19.
    Kang  Hyuno  Tian  Le  Thompson  Wesley 《Brain Cell Biology》2003,32(5-8):975-985
    Schwann cells and axons labeled by transgene-encoded, fluorescent proteins can be repeatedly imaged in living mice to observe the reinnervation of neuromuscular junctions. Axons typically return to denervated junctions by growing along Schwann cells contained in the old nerve sheaths or “Schwann cell tubes”. These axons then commonly “escape” the synaptic sites by growing along the Schwann cell processes extended during the period of denervation. These “escaped fibers” grow to innervate adjacent synaptic sites along Schwann cells bridging these sites. Within the synaptic site, Schwann cells, originally positioned above the synaptic site continue to cover the acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) immediately following denervation, but gradually vacate portions of this site. When regenerating axons return, they first deploy along the Schwann cells and ignore sites of AChRs vacated by Schwann cells. In many cases these vacated sites are never reinnervated and are ultimately lost. Following partial denervation, Schwann cells grow in an apparently tropic fashion from denervated to nearby innervated synaptic sites and serve as the substrates for nerve sprouting. These experiments show that Schwann cells provide pathways that stimulate axon growth and insure the rapid reinnervation of denervated or partially denervated muscles.  相似文献   

    20.
    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   

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