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Comparison of Axonal Transport of Cytoplasmic- and Particulate-Associated Tubulin in Rat Optic System
Authors:Jeffry F Goodrum  Pierre Morell
Institution:Biological Sciences Research Center and Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S.A.
Abstract: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.
Keywords:Axonal transport  Tubulin  Membrane protein
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