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The release of axonally transported material from an in vitro amphibian sciatic nerve preparation

โœ Scribed by Snyder, R. E.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1988
Tongue
English
Weight
641 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3034

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โœฆ Synopsis


The rapid axonal transport of a pulse of I "5Slmethionine-labelled material was used to study the release of transported material from amphibian nerve maintained in vitro. Following creation of a moving pulse of activity in a dorsal root ganglion-sciatic nerve preparation, the ganglion was removed and the nerve placed in a three-compartment tray, the section of nerve in the middle compartment containing no truncated branches (unbranched section). All three compartments were filled with a saline solution that in some studies contained nonradioactive methionine (1.0 mmoliL). Analysis of studies in which nonradioactive methionine was absent revealed that labelled material appeared in the bathing solution of the end compartments that contained truncated branches, but not in the solution of the middle (unbranched) compartment. The quantity of label released in the branched compartments was approximately 6% of that remaining in the corresponding section of nerve following an 18-20 h incubation period. However, when nonradioactive methionine was present, all compartments showed a n additional activity in the bathing solution of approximately 10% of that remaining in the nerve. In another study in which a position-sensi tive detector of ionizing radiation was used to monitor progress of the pulse, it was found that activity did not enter the bathing solution of a compartment prior to the pulse of activity. It is concluded that in the absence of methionine from the bathing solution, axonally transported material is released only from regions of nerve that contain severed axons; however, the presence of methionine allows transported material to be released from nerve containing intact axons. Ultrafiltration studies and thin-layer chromatography revealed the majority of material released to he of low-molecular weight (<30,000 daltons) and not free ["S]methionine.


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