Abstract: | Abstract— Antisera against the rat olfactory marker protein were prepared by injection of the homogeneous protein into a goat and a rabbit. When the antisera were tested by immunodiffusion against olfactory tissue extracts, many but not all mammalian species cross-reacted against these antisera. Immunoprecipitin titrations with the goat antiserum generally showed higher cross-reactivity against olfactory extracts from species more closely related to the rat. Human olfactory bulb extracts and non-mammalian olfactory tissue extracts did not cross-react with the antisera by either immunodiffusion tests or immunoprecipitin titrations, however, they did cross-react when tested by a competitive binding radioimmunoassay using tritium-labelled purified rat protein and the goat antibody. The olfactory marker protein which is an example of a brain protein specific to one cell, the olfactory chemoreceptor neuron, has a very wide species distribution, being present in rat, mouse, hamster, guinea-pig, sheep, cow, rabbit, pig, dog, man, frog and garfish. Therefore it presumably plays an important and unique role related to the function of this primary chemosensory neuron. |