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Requirement of Heavy Neurofilament Subunit in the Development of Axons with Large Calibers

Authors :
Gregory A. Elder
Victor L. Friedrich
Pang-Hsien Tu
Robert A. Lazzarini
Chulho Kang
Virginia M.-Y. Lee
Bin Zhang
Andrei Gourov
Paolo Bosco
Source :
Journal of Cell Biology. 143:195-205
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 1998.

Abstract

Neurofilaments (NFs) are prominent components of large myelinated axons. Previous studies have suggested that NF number as well as the phosphorylation state of the COOH-terminal tail of the heavy neurofilament (NF-H) subunit are major determinants of axonal caliber. We created NF-H knockout mice to assess the contribution of NF-H to the development of axon size as well as its effect on the amounts of low and mid-sized NF subunits (NF-L and NF-M respectively). Surprisingly, we found that NF-L levels were reduced only slightly whereas NF-M and tubulin proteins were unchanged in NF-H–null mice. However, the calibers of both large and small diameter myelinated axons were diminished in NF-H–null mice despite the fact that these mice showed only a slight decrease in NF density and that filaments in the mutant were most frequently spaced at the same interfilament distance found in control. Significantly, large diameter axons failed to develop in both the central and peripheral nervous systems. These results demonstrate directly that unlike losing the NF-L or NF-M subunits, loss of NF-H has only a slight effect on NF number in axons. Yet NF-H plays a major role in the development of large diameter axons.

Details

ISSN :
15408140 and 00219525
Volume :
143
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cell Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e9a9bca870d5f67bfc04cdccc99b34bb