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Myelin Gangliosides in Vertebrates
Authors:Frederick B. Cochran  Jr.    Robert K. Yu  Robert W. Ledeen
Affiliation:Departments of Neurology and Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.;Department of Neurology, Yule University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Abstract:Abstract: A phylogenetic survey of brain myelin ganglioside patterns and concentrations has been carried out on 16 vertebrate species. Gangliosides were isolated from purified myelin and found to vary in concentration from 25 μg of sialic acid per 100 mg of myeh for goldfish to a value of 395 for turkey. The latter species had approximately equivalent amounts of GM1 and GM4 as the two major gangliosides. The 11 mammals studied all had GM1 as the major ganglioside, with variable amounts of GM4; rhesus monkey and human had 20-25% GM4, whereas the others had less than 10%. Amphibia and fish myelin contained the least total ganglioside, with patterns that showed relatively little GM1 and no detectable GM4. Alligator myelin was unique in having a total concentration as high as the avian species, but a pattern with predominantly diand trisialo gangliosides.
Keywords:Gangliosides    Myelin    Species variation    Central nervous system    Ganglioside GM4    Ganglioside GM1    Myelin proteins
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