PROTEIN COMPOSITION OF AXONS and MYELIN FROM RAT and HUMAN PERIPHERAL NERVES |
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Authors: | Steven Micko W. W. Schlaepfer |
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Affiliation: | Washington University School of Medicine, Department of Pathology, 660 South Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract— Proteins of rat and human peripheral nerves were studied in whole nerve homogenates and in purified myelin and axonal preparations of peripheral nerve. Both myelin and axonal fractions were obtained from desheathed and minced nerve segments by flotation and sedimentation, respectively, in 0.85 m -sucrose following hypotonic treatment. The purity of myelin and axonal preparations was confirmed by electron microscopic examination of pelleted material. Nerve proteins were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 8.3 and 7.4. Major protein bands of fresh whole nerve homogenates corresponded to polypeptide bands of either the purified myelin or axon preparations. The most prominent electrophoretic band in peripheral nerve was identified as a myelin glycoprotein with molecular weight of 27,000. The major polypeptides of axon preparations had molecular weights of 200,000, 150,000, 69,000, 55,000 and 27,000. The latter two proteins were believed to represent tubulin and residual major myelin protein, respectively. The three largest axonal polypeptides were believed to be derived from neurofilaments, which represented the predominant organelle of the purified axons. Collagen was also seen in whole nerve homogenates and in purified axons but could be distinguished by its metachromatic staining with Coomassie blue. |
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