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Active polysomes in the axoplasm of the squid giant axon

Authors :
E. Menichini
M Langella
Emilia Castigli
Barry B. Kaplan
C. Perrone Capano
Antonio Giuditta
Rainer Martin
Giuditta, Antonio
Menichini, E.
PERRONE CAPANO, Carla
Langella, M.
Martin, R.
Castigli, E.
Kaplan, B. B.
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

Axons and axon terminals are widely believed to lack the capacity to synthesize proteins, relying instead on the delivery of proteins made in the perikaryon. In agreement with this view, axoplasmic proteins synthesized by the isolated giant axon of the squid are believed to derive entirely from periaxonal glial cells. However, squid axoplusm is known to contain the requisite components of an extra-mitocliondrial protein synthetic system, including protdn factors, tRNAs, rRNAs, and a heterogeneous family of mRNAs. Hence, the giant axon could, in principle, maintain an endogenous protein synthetic capacity. Here, we report that the squid giant axon also contains active polysomes and niRNA, which hybridizes to a riboprobe encoding murine neurofilament protein. Taken together, these findings provide direct evidence that proteins (including the putative neuron-specific neurofilament protein) are also synthesized de novo in the axonal compartment.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e968303faba14cc98797b84d19a1769