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1.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to rat neurofilament (NF) proteins NF-L, NF-M, and NF-H were used to examine the developmental programs of NF expression in rat embryos. The ability of these mAbs to recognize differentially phosphorylated states of NF-M and NF-H (Lee et al., 1987, the preceding paper) was exploited in order to examine the temporal and spatial patterns of NF phosphorylation during early neuronal development in vivo. NF proteins were first detected on the twelfth day postfertilization (E12) using NF-L- or NF-M-specific mAbs. By E13, the coexpression of NF-L and NF-M was widespread, reflecting dramatic increases of immunoreactivity to both subunits. Partial phosphorylation, denoted P[+], of NF-M was already present in perikarya and neurites of E12 neurons. Extensively phosphorylated, or P[+++], isoforms of NF-M appeared in E13 axons, thereby establishing a proximodistal gradient of NF phosphorylation during the earliest phase of NF expression. Immunoblots of tissue homogenates revealed that most NF-M of E13 embryos exists in a partially phosphorylated, or P[+], isoform. Unequivocal staining for NF-H first appeared at E15, a time at which NF-L and NF-M had already attained their adult patterns of immunocytochemical staining. Levels of NF-H were extremely low at E15 but could be detected in all of its differentially phosphorylated states, i.e., nonphosphorylated P[-], partly P[+], and highly P[+++] phosphorylated isoforms. P[+++] isoforms of NF-H were restricted to the distal portions of E15 axons, although staining of more proximal axons, like those in adult, was noted by E17. Immunoblots of E17 embryos revealed most NF-H as P[-] and P[+] isoforms. Quantities of immunoreactive NF-H increased very slowly and remained well below those of NF-M and NF-L for several weeks beyond birth. These results show that sequential forms of NFs are expressed by developing and maturing neurons throughout the nervous system. An "immature" form of NFs, composed of NF-M and NF-L, appears to function in establishing the neuronal phenotype and in initiating and maintaining neurite outgrowth. Addition of NF-H confers a "mature" state to the NF. This delayed expression of NF-H is a slow and graduated process that coincides in time with the stabilization of neuronal circuitries and may be important in modulating axonal events, such as the slowing of cytoskeletal transport and the growth of axonal caliber.  相似文献   

2.
Neurofilament (NF) proteins are expressed in most mature neurons in the central nervous system. Although they play a crucial role in neuronal growth, organization, shape, and plasticity, their expression pattern and cellular distribution in the developing hippocampus remain unknown. In the present study, we have used Western blotting and immunocytochemistry to study the low- (NF-L), medium- (NF-M), and high- (NF-H) molecular-weight NF proteins; phosphorylated epitopes of NF-M and NF-H; and a nonphosphorylated epitope of NF-H in the early postnatal (through P1-P21) development of the rat hippocampus. During the first postnatal week, NF-M was the most abundantly expressed NF, followed by NF-L, whereas the expression of NF-H was very low. Through P7-P14, the expression of NF-H increased dramatically and later began to plateau, as also occurred in the expression of NF-M and NF-L. At P1, no NF-M immunopositive cell bodies were detected, but cell processes in the CA1-CA3 fields were faintly immunopositive for NF-M and for the phosphorylated epitopes of NF-M and NF-H. At P7, CA3 pyramidal neurons were strongly immunopositive for NF-L and NF-H, but not for NF-M. The axons of granule cells, the mossy fibers (MFs), were NF-L and NF-M positive through P7-P21 but were NF-H immunonegative at all ages. Although they stained strongly for the phosphorylated NF-M and NF-H at P7, the staining intensity sharply decreased at P14 and remained so at P21. The cell bodies of CA1 pyramidal neurons and granule cells remained immunonegative against all five antibodies in all age groups. Our results show a different time course in the expression and differential cell type and cellular localization of the NF proteins in the developing hippocampus. These developmental changes could be of importance in determining the reactivity of hippocampal neurons in pathological conditions in the immature hippocampus.  相似文献   

3.
A new panel of greater than 300 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) was prepared to the high, middle, and low Mr rat neurofilament (NF) subunits (NF-H, NF-M and NF-L, respectively). NF proteins were purified both from native, i.e., phosphorylated rat NFs and from enzymatically dephosphorylated rat NFs. The resulting mAbs were used to biochemically and immunochemically distinguish and characterize distinct and differentially phosphorylated isoforms of NF subunits. By immunoblot, all mAbs specific for NF-L and some mAbs specific for NF-M detected their specific NF subunit regardless of whether or not the NFs had been treated with alkaline phosphatase, and such antibodies were termed "phosphate-independent" or P[ind] mAbs. The other mAbs were specific for NF-M, NF-H, or for both NF-M and NF-H, and they recognized epitopes in the COOH termini of these subunits. Significantly, the latter mAbs could discriminate different isoforms of NF-M and NF-H, depending on the phosphorylation state of each variant. Such mAbs were assigned to one of 4 distinct categories on the basis of their performance in immunoblots of progressively dephosphorylated rat NF samples and by immunohistochemistry of various adult rat nervous tissues: (1) P[-] mAbs preferentially stained neuronal perikarya and dendrites, and they recognized only extensively dephosphorylated (and nonphosphorylated) NF-H; (2) P[+] mAbs stained axons more strongly than perikarya, and primarily blotted phosphorylated, but not nonphosphorylated, forms of NF-H and NF-M; (3) P[++] mAbs stained axons almost to the exclusion of perikarya, and in blots recognized only the extensively phosphorylated forms of NF-H and NF-M (i.e., subunits subjected to limited enzymatic dephosphorylation); (4) P[ ] mAbs also predominantly stained axons, but the briefest alkaline phosphatase treatment abolished the NF-M and NF-H immunobands produced by these mAbs. Two-dimensional gel analysis and immunoblotting of total proteins from adult rat dorsal root ganglion verified mAb specificity in situ, and showed that differentially phosphorylated isoforms of NF-M and NF-H occur in vivo. This provided additional evidence that mAbs can detect all 4 phosphorylation-dependent endogenous isoelectric variants of NF-H and NF-M.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
5.
The expression of neurofilament (NF) proteins was examined during postnatal development of the rat nervous system in order to elucidate the nature of NF expression during the period of transition from the embryonic (immature) to the adult (mature) stages of NF expression. mRNAs to the light (NF-L), mid-sized (NF-M), and heavy (NF-H) NF proteins were compared by Northern blots and by in situ hybridizations, in NF-rich (i.e., DRG, spinal cord and brainstem) and in NF-poor (i.e., cerebellum and cerebral cortex) regions of the developing rat nervous system. NF proteins were analyzed by gel electrophoresis and by immunoblots. In each tissue, the expression of NF-H was delayed compared to that of NF-L and NF-M, as previously reported. The present study now shows that the delayed expression of NF-H is accompanied by parallel up-regulations in the expressions of NF-L and NF-M, both at the levels of mRNA and protein. Similar rates of increase of all three NF mRNAs occur between postnatal days 5 (P5) and 24 (P24) in rat spinal cord and DRG. Furthermore, the postnatal up-regulation of NF expression is characterized by a progressive accumulation of all three NF proteins in the tissues. The findings indicate that the adult pattern of NF expression (with high levels of expression of all three NF proteins) becomes established during the postnatal period of development, raising questions as to the nature of factors that coregulate the expression of NF subunits.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian neurofilaments are assembled from the light (NF-L), midsized (NF-M), and heavy (NF-H) neurofilament proteins. While NF-M and NF-H cannot self-assemble into homopolymers, the data concerning NF-L has been more contradictory. In vitro bovine, porcine, and murine NF-L can homopolymerize in the absence of other subunits. However, in vivo studies suggest that neither rat nor mouse NF-L can form filaments when transfected alone into cells lacking endogenous intermediate filaments. By contrast, human NF-L forms homopolymers in similar cell lines. Recently we generated mice with null mutations in the NF-M and NF-H genes. To determine if mouse NF-L can homopolymerize in mouse axons, NF-M and NF-H null mutants were bred to create a line of double mutant animals. Here we show that axons in NF-M/H double mutant animals are largely devoid of 10-nm filaments. Instead, the axoplasm is transformed to a microtubule-based cytoskeleton-although the lack of any increase in tubulin levels per unit length of nerve or of increases in microtubule numbers relative to myelin sheath thickness argues that microtubules are not increased in response to the loss of neurofilaments. Thus in vivo rodent neurofilaments are obligate heteropolymers requiring NF-L plus either NF-M or NF-H to form a filamentous network.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined the patterns of expression of the major intermediate filament (IF) protein mRNAs during development of the hamster brain. Quantitative northern blotting was used to examine changes in the levels of mRNAs for the low, middle and high molecular weight neurofilament proteins (NF-L, NF-M, NF-H) as well as peripherin, vimentin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Total RNA was isolated from hamster brains at embryonic (E) days 12 and 14 and postnatal (P) days 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 20, 28 and 60-90 (adult), and probed with specific IF cDNAs. Northern blotting revealed that NF-L and NF-M mRNAs were present at very low levels in embryonic brain and that significant expression of these genes only occurred postnatally when the levels increased dramatically until P28 and then declined again in the adult. Increases in NF-H mRNA levels were somewhat delayed relative to those of NF-L and NF-M. NF-H mRNA was not seen at embryonic stages and was expressed at very low levels prior to P9; after that time the levels increased rapidly until P28 and then declined in the adult. Two of the type III IF genes, peripherin and vimentin, followed a pattern of expression opposite that of the NF genes. Both peripherin and vimentin mRNAs were present in embryonic brain and were expressed at higher levels during early postnatal stages than at later times. The magnitude and rate of reduction in vimentin gene expression in the postnatal interval was much greater than that of peripherin. GFAP mRNA levels were extremely low prior to P9 after which a robust increase occurred, followed by a decline in the adult. We discuss the implication of the dramatic changes in IF isotype expression in brain to the pathways of both neuronal and glial development in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
9.
NB2a/d1 cells constitutively express and extensively phosphorylate neurofilament (NF) triplet proteins. However, only hypophosphorylated NFs are observed within the Triton-insoluble perikaryal cytoskeletons of undifferentiated and differentiated cells, while phosphorylated NF isoforms accumulate exclusively within the axonal neurites elaborated following treatment with dbcAMP. We examined NF synthesis and distribution of newly synthesized subunits by immunoprecipitation from 35S-methionine-radiolabeled undifferentiated and dbcAMP-treated differentiated cells. Following a 15 min pulse radiolabeling, NF-H isoforms migrating from approximately 160–200 kDa, NF-M isoforms migrating from approximately 97 k-145 Da, and a single 70 kDa NF-L isoform were readily detectable within Triton-soluble fractions from both undifferentiated and differentiated cells. During chase analyses in the absence of radiolabel, the entire spectrum of isoforms was present in Triton-soluble and -insoluble fractions from both undifferentiated and differentiated cells. However, differentiated cells displayed a significant increase in radiolabel associated with each subunit and isoform. Normalization of their NF synthesis levels to those of undifferentiated cells revealed that differentiated cells deposited 10-fold more radiolabeled subunits into the Triton-insoluble cytoskeleton as compared to undifferentiated cells. Similar levels of radiolabeled subunits were observed throughout the 2 hr period in dbcAMP-treated cells. By contrast, radiolabeled subunits and isoforms increased in undifferentiated cytoskeletons during the chase period, although final levels remained substantially lower than those observed in cytoskeletons of dbcAMP-treated cells. These data were considered with respect to potential mechanisms by which the phosphorylated NFs are normally excluded from perikaryal cytoskeletons. The presence of extensively phosphorylated subunits within perikarya indicates the presence of necessary NF kinases. The progressive increase of radiolabeled subunits, including phosphorylated isoforms of NF-H and NF-M, within undifferentiated cytoskeletons, argues against selective elimination of phosphorylated NFs from perikaryal cytoskeletons by proteolysis or dephosphorylation as exclusive regulatory mechanisms; if these were the case, overall decreases of radiolabeled subunits (proteolysis), or specific loss of phosphorylated isoforms (dephosphorylation) would have been observed during chase analyses. The increased deposition of NF subunits within cytoskeletons in dbcAMP-treated cells (which have elaborated axonal neurites), coupled with our previous immunocytochemical observation of segregation of phosphorylated NFs within axonal neurites, suggests that selective assembly is a major control mechanism to maintain normal distribution patterns of phosphorylated NFs. The up-regulation in NF synthesis observed following dbcAMP treatment is likely to support the increased need for NFs by the developing axonal cytoskeleton. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Purified bovine neurofilament (NF) subunit proteins were reassembled in vitro to form either homopolymeric or heteropolymeric intermediate-sized filaments using single or paired combinations of NF triplet proteins. Using conditions established for the reassembly of bovine NF triplet proteins, we demonstrated that the low Mr NF subunit (NF-L) alone and in combination with the middle Mr NF subunit (NF-M) reassembled very efficiently, i.e. greater than 95% of these proteins formed filaments within 90 min from the start of reassembly. In contra-distinction, the high Mr NF subunit (NF-H) alone and in combination with NF-M or NF-L underwent reassembly to a lesser extent, i.e. 62-88% of these proteins reassembled within 90 min. Immunolabeling of the reassembled NF polymers revealed striking differences in the organization of rod domain determinants. Specifically, antibodies specific for epitopes in the rod domains of NF-H, NF-M and NF-L failed to bind heteropolymeric filaments but recognized rod domains in the homopolymers. In contrast, antibodies specific to head and tail domains of all NF proteins labeled the reassembled hetero- and homopolymeric NFs. Double-labeling of heteropolymers demonstrated that pairs of different NF subunits coassembled into intermediate-sized filaments. Our results also showed that only copolymeric filaments of NF-L and NF-M, but not NF-L/NF-H and NF-M/NF-H were able to form long and stable 10-nm wide filaments. These observations provide new insights into the requirements for stable filament formation from NF subunits. In particular, they support the notion that only NF-L/NF-M, but not NF-L/NF-H or NF-M/NF-H might assemble into a stable filamentous network in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
The neurofilament (NF) proteins (NF-H, NF-M, and NF-L for high, medium, and low molecular weights) play a crucial role in the organization of neuronal shape and function. In a preliminary study, the abundance of total NF-L was shown to be decreased in brains of opioid addicts. Because of the potential relevance of NF abnormalities in opioid addiction, we quantitated nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated NF in postmortem brains from 12 well-defined opioid abusers who had died of an opiate overdose (heroin or methadone). Levels of NF were assessed by immunoblotting techniques using phospho-independent and phospho-dependent antibodies, and the relative (% changes in immunoreactivity) and absolute (changes in ng NF/microg total protein) amounts of NF were calculated. Decreased levels of nonphosphorylated NF-H (42-32%), NF-M (14-9%) and NF-L (30-29%) were found in the prefrontal cortex of opioid addicts compared with sex, age, and postmortem delay-matched controls. In contrast, increased levels of phosphorylated NF-H (58-41%) and NF-M (56-28%) were found in the same brains of opioid addicts. The ratio of phosphorylated to nonphosphorylated NF-H in opioid addicts (3.4) was greater than that in control subjects (1.6). In the same brains of opioid addicts, the levels of protein phosphatase of the type 2A were found unchanged, which indicated that the hyperphosphorylation of NF-H is not the result of a reduced dephosphorylation process. The immunodensities of GFAP (the specific glial cytoskeletol protein), alpha-internexin (a neuronal filament related to NF-L) and synaptophysin (a synapse-specific protein) were found unchanged, suggesting a lack of gross changes in glial reaction, other intermediate filaments of the neuronal cytoskeletol, and synaptic density in the prefrontal cortex of opioid addicts. These marked reductions in total NF proteins and the aberrant hyperphosphorylation of NF-H in brains of opioid addicts may play a significant role in the cellular mechanisms of opioid addiction.  相似文献   

12.
The low abundance of soluble neurofilament (NF) subunits in mature axons has suggested that newly synthesized NF proteins rapidly assemble into highly stable polymers and associate with the Triton X-100–insoluble cytoskeleton. The dynamic nature of these subunit associations in vivo remains unresolved, and the applicability of this assembly model to NFs in other neuronal compartments or to developing neurons is unknown. Here, we report that a unique pool of Triton X-100–soluble, extensively phosphorylated, high molecular weight NF subunits (NF-H, or H-200) are abundantly expressed in the mouse CNS during early postnatal development and persist in the perikaryal compartment of some mature neurons. Triton-soluble H-200 subunits appeared at postnatal day 14 (P14) and remained high through P60, beyond which the percentage declined to marginal levels by P120. Medium and low molecular weight NF (NF-M and NF-L, respectively) were at all times only detectable within the cytoskeleton. Comparison of soluble and cytoskeleton-associated H-200 immunoreactivity indicated that certain phosphorylation-dependent epitopes were confined to the cytoskeleton. Pulse-chase radiolabeling analyses in optic pathway demonstrated that some Triton-soluble NF-H subunits are extensively phosphorylated within retinal perikarya before they are incorporated into Triton-insoluble structures. These findings indicate that the assembly behaviors of NF-H differ substantially from those of NF-M and NF-L, and that the interaction of NF-H with NFs may be more dynamic than is generally recognized, especially during brain development and within specific compartments of mature neurons. J. Neurosci. Res. 48:515–523, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Neurofilament (NF) proteins consist of three subunits of different molecular weights defined as NF-H, NF-M, and NF-L. They are typical structures of the neuronal cytoskeleton. Their immunocytochemical distribution during postnatal development of cat cerebellum was studied with several monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against phosphorylated or unmodified sites. Expression and distribution of the triplet neurofilament proteins changed with maturation. Afferent mossy and climbing fibers in the medullary layer contained NF-M and NF-L already at birth, whereas NF-H appeared later. Within the first three postnatal weeks, all three subunits appeared in mossy and climbing fibers in the internal granular and molecular layers and in the axons of Purkinje cells. Axons of local circuit neurons such as basket cells expressed these proteins at the end of the first month, whereas parallel fibers expressed them last, at the beginning of the third postnatal month. Differential localization was especially observed for NF-H. Depending on phosphorylation, NF-H proteins were found in different axon types in climbing, mossy, and basket fibers or additionally in parallel fibers. A nonphosphorylated NF-H subunit was exclusively located in some Purkinje cells at early developmental stages and in some smaller interneurons later. A novel finding is the presence of a phosphorylation site in the NF-H subunit that is localized in dendrites of Purkinje cells but not in axons. Expression and phosphorylation of the NF-H subunit, especially, is cell-type specific and possibly involved in the adult-type stabilization of the axonal and dendritic cytoskeleton. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Specificity of human anti-neurofilament autoantibodies   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The specificities and isotypes of human antibodies that react with neurofilament (NF) proteins were examined by Western blot analysis. Two-thirds of the subjects tested had antibodies to the 200 kDa high molecular weight neurofilament protein (NF-H), and fewer had antibodies to the low and middle molecular weight neurofilament proteins (NF-L and NF-M respectively). Human autoantibodies bound to both native and dephosphorylated NF-H, but some antibodies bound to dephosphorylated NF-H only, indicating the presence of at least two target epitopes. They also recognized a fusion protein containing a segment of the NF-H protein produced by a cDNA clone in Escherichia coli, indicating that they bind to unmodified peptide epitopes. The anti-NF-H antibodies were mostly IgG, but were frequently complexed to IgA or IgM antibodies, possibly with rheumatoid factor or anti-idiotypic activity. These characteristics of anti-NF-H antibodies are most consistent with a secondary immune response that is antigen driven and T-cell dependent.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We have characterized stages in the posttranslational processing of the three neurofilament subunits, High (NF-H), Middle (NF-M), and Low (NF-L), in retinal ganglion cells in vivo during the interval between synthesis in cell bodies within the retina and appearance of these polypeptides in axons at the level of the optic nerve (optic axons). Neurofilament proteins pulse-labeled by injecting mice intravitreally with [35S]methionine or [32P]orthophosphate, were isolated from Triton-soluble and Triton-insoluble fractions of the retina or optic axons by immunoprecipitation or immunoaffinity chromatography. Within 2 h after [35S]methionine injection, the retina contained neurofilament-immunoreactive radiolabeled proteins with apparent molecular weights of 160, 139, and 70 kDa, which co-migrated with subunits of axonal neurofilaments that were dephosphorylated in vitro with alkaline phosphatase. The two larger polypeptides were not labeled with [32P]orthophosphate, indicating that they were relatively unmodified forms of NF-H and NF-M. About 75% of the subunits were Triton-insoluble by 2 h after isotope injection, and this percentage increased to 98% by 6 h. Labeled neurofilament polypeptides appeared in optic axons as early as 2 h after injection. These subunits exhibited apparent molecular weights of 160, 139, and 70 kDa and were Triton-insoluble. The time of appearance of fully modified polypeptide forms differed for each subunit (2 h for NF-L, 6-18 h for NF-M, 18-24 h for NF-H) and was preceded by the transient appearance of intermediate forms. The modified radiolabeled subunits in optic axons 3 days after synthesis were heavily labeled with [32P]orthophosphate and exhibited the same apparent molecular weights as subunits of axonal neurofilaments (70 kDa, 145 and 140 kDa, and 195-210 kDa, respectively). Whole mounts of retina immunostained with monoclonal antibodies against NF-H in different states of phosphorylation demonstrated a transition from non-phosphorylated neurofilaments to predominantly phosphorylated ones within a region of the axon between 200 and 1000 microns downstream from the cell body. These experiments demonstrate that the addition of most phosphate groups to NF-M and NF-H takes place within a proximal region of the axon. The rapid appearance of modified forms of NF-L after synthesis may imply that processing of this subunit occurs at least partly in the cell body. The presence of a substantial pool of Triton-insoluble, unmodified subunits early after synthesis indicates that the heaviest incorporation of phosphate occurs after neurofilament proteins are polymerized.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The control of neurofilament (NF) protein gene expression was studied by determining and comparing the levels of mRNA to the heavy (NF-H), mid-sized (NF-M) and light (NF-L) NF protein subunits in rat dorsal root ganglia (DRG) following sciatic nerve transection. mRNA to NF-H (4.5 kb), to NF-M (3.4 kb) and to NF-L (2.5 and 4.0 kb) were identified in Northern blots and quantitated in dot blot analyses, using specific cDNA probes for each NF protein. Following transection and continuing for at least 28 days. The early and co-terminal fall in mRNAs suggests that the 3 NF genes are regulated by common factor(s) and that the function of these factor(s) is influenced by the state of axonal continuity with the target organ.  相似文献   

18.
Neurofilaments, assembled from NF-L (68 Kd), NF-M (95 Kd), and NF-H (115 kd), are the most abundatn structural components in large myelinated axons, particularly those of motor neurons. Aberrant neurofilament accumulation in cell bodies and axons of motor neurons is a prominent pathological feature of several motor neuron diseases, including sporadic and familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Transgenic methods have proved in mice that mutation in or increased expression of neurofilament subunits can be primary causes of motor neuron disease that mimics the neurofilamentous pathology often reported in human disease. To examine whether mutation in neurofilament subunits causes or predisposes to ALS, we used single-strand conformation polymorphism coupled with DNA sequencing to search for mutations in the entirety of the human NF-L, NF-M, and NF-H genes from 100 familial ALS patients known not to carry mutations in superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), as well as from 75 sporadic ALS patients. Six polypeptide sequence variants were identified in rod and tail domains of NF-L, NF-M, or NF-H. However, all were found at comparable frequency in DNAs from normal individuals and no variant cosegregated with familial disease. Two deletions found previously in NF-H genes of sporadic ALS patients were not seen in this group of familial or sporadic ALS patiens.  相似文献   

19.
Local protein synthesis within axons has been studied on a limited scale. In the present study, several techniques were used to investigate this synthesis in sciatic nerve, and to show that it increases after damage to the axon. Neurofilament (NF) mRNAs were probed by RT-PCR, Northern blot and in situ hybridization in axons of intact rat sciatic nerve, and in proximal or distal stumps after sciatic nerve transection. RT-PCR demonstrated the presence of NF-L, NF-M and NF-H mRNAs in intact sciatic nerve, as well as in proximal and distal stumps of severed nerves. Northern blot analysis of severed nerve detected NF-L and NF-M, but not NF-H. This technique did not detect the three NFs mRNAs in intact nerve. Detection of NF-L and NF-M mRNA in injured nerve, however, indicated that there was an up-regulation in response to nerve injury. In situ hybridization showed that NF-L mRNA was localized in the Schwann cell perinuclear area, in the myelin sheath, and at the boundary between myelin sheath and cortical axoplasm. RNA and protein synthesizing activities were always greater in proximal as compared to distal stumps. NF triplet proteins were also shown to be synthesized de novo in the proximal stump. The detection of neurofilament mRNAs in nerves, their possible upregulation during injury and the synthesis of neurofilament protein triplet in the proximal stumps, suggest that these mRNAs may be involved in nerve regeneration, providing a novel point of view of this phenomenon.  相似文献   

20.
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