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Normal metabolism but different physical properties of myelin from mice deficient in proteolipid protein

✍ Scribed by Helga Jurevics; Janell Hostettler; Deanne W. Sammond; Klaus-Armin Nave; Arrel D. Toews; Pierre Morell


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
313 KB
Volume
71
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Proteolipid protein (PLP) is the primary protein component of CNS myelin, yet myelin from the PLP^null^ mouse has only minor ultrastructural abnormalities. Might compensation for a potentially unstable structure involve increased myelin synthesis and turnover? This was not the case; neither accumulation nor in vivo synthesis rates for the myelin‐specific lipid cerebroside was altered in PLP^null^ mice relative to wild‐type (wt) animals. However, the yield of myelin from PLP^null^ mice, assayed as levels of cerebroside, was only about 55% of wt control levels. Loss of myelin occurred during initial centrifugation of brain homogenate at 20,000__g__ for 20 min, which is sufficient to sediment almost all myelin from wt mice. Cerebroside‐containing fragments from PLP^null^ mice remaining in the supernatant could be sedimented by more stringent centrifugation, 100,000__g__ for 60 min. Both the rapidly and the more slowly sedimenting cerebroside‐containing membranes banded at the 0.85/0.32 M sucrose interface of a density gradient, as did myelin from wt mice. These results suggest at least some myelin from PLP^null^ mice differs from wt myelin with respect to physical stability (fragmented into smaller particles during dispersion) and/or density. Alternatively, slowly sedimenting cerebroside‐containing particles could be myelin precursor membranes that, lacking PLP, were retarded in their processing toward mature myelin and thus differ from mature myelin in physical properties. If this is so, recently synthesized cerebroside should be preferentially found in these “slower‐sedimenting” myelin precursor fragments. Metabolic tracer experiments showed this was not the case. We conclude that PLP^null^ myelin is physically less stable and/or less dense than wt myelin. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.