Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 16, 1605-1613, Copyright © 1996 by Society for Neuroscience
Mechanisms for the maintenance and eventual degradation of neurofilament proteins in the distal segments of severed goldfish mauthner axons
TD Raabe, T Nguyen, C Archer and GD Bittner
Department of Zoology, University of Texas at Austin 78712-1064, USA.
Cellular mechanisms that might affect the degradation of neurofilament
proteins (NFPs) were examined in the distal segments of severed goldfish
Mauthner axons (M-axons), which do not degenerate for more than 2 months
after severance. Calpain levels, as determined by reactivity to a
polyclonal antibody, remained constant for 80 d postseverance in distal
segments of M-axons and then declined from 80 to 85 d postseverance.
Calpain activity in rat brain, as determined by a spectrophotometric assay,
was much higher than calpain activity in control and severed goldfish
brain, spinal cord, muscle, or M-axons. Calpain activity was extremely low
in M-axons compared with that in all other tissues and remained low for up
to 80 d postseverance in distal segments of M-axons. Phosphorylated NFPs,
as determined by Stains-All treatment of SDS gels, were maintained for up
to 72 d postseverance and then decreased noticeably at 75 d postseverance
when NFP breakdown products appeared on silver-stained gels. By 85 d
post-severance, phosphorylated NFPs no longer were detected, and NFP
breakdown products were the most prominent bands on silver-stained gels.
These results suggest that the distal segments of M-axons survive for
months after severance, because NFPs are maintained in a phosphorylated
state that stabilizes and protects NFPs from degradation by low levels of
calpain activity in the M-axon; the distal segments of severed M-axons
degenerate eventually when NFPs no longer are maintained in a
phosphorylated state and become susceptible to degradation, possibly by low
levels of calpain activity in the M-axon.