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Volume 16, Number 21,
Issue of November 1, 1996
pp. 6742-6752
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Functional Analysis of Dynactin and Cytoplasmic Dynein in Slow
Axonal Transport
Received Aug. 2, 1996; accepted Aug. 14, 1996.
James F. Dillman III1,
Lewis P. Dabney1,
Sher Karki2,
Bryce M. Paschal3,
Erika L. F. Holzbaur2, and
K. Kevin Pfister1
1 Cell Biology Department, University of Virginia
School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908, 2 School of Veterinary Medicine, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, and
3 Markey Center and Department of Biochemistry, University
of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
The neuron moves protein and membrane from the cell body to the
synapse and back via fast and slow axonal transport. Little is known
about the mechanism of microtubule movement in slow axonal transport,
although cytoplasmic dynein, the motor for retrograde fast axonal
transport of membranous organelles, has been proposed to also slide
microtubules down the axon. We previously showed that most of the
cytoplasmic dynein moving in the anterograde direction in the axon is
associated with the microfilaments and other proteins of the slow
component b (SCb) transport complex. The dynactin complex binds dynein,
and it has been suggested that dynactin also associates with
microfilaments. We therefore examined the role of dynein and dynactin
in slow axonal transport. We find that most of the dynactin is also
transported in SCb, including dynactin, which contains the
neuron-specific splice variant p135Glued, which
binds dynein but not microtubules. Furthermore, SCb dynein binds
dynactin in vitro. SCb dynein, like dynein from brain,
binds microtubules in an ATP-sensitive manner, whereas brain dynactin
binds microtubules in a salt-dependent manner. Dynactin from SCb does
not bind microtubules, indicating that the binding of dynactin to
microtubules is regulated and suggesting that the role of SCb dynactin
is to bind dynein, not microtubules. These data support a model in
which dynactin links the cytoplasmic dynein to the SCb transport
complex. Dynein then may interact transiently with microtubules to
slide them down the axon at the slower rate of SCa.
Key words:
axonal transport;
slow component b;
dynein;
dynactin;
microtubule;
microfilament;
motor protein
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