Abstract

Isolated dendrites, somata, and desheathed axons of the goldfish Mauthner neuron (M-cell), in addition to other isolated myelin sheath-free axons of the goldfish spinal cord and of rabbit lumbar ventral roots, were shown by immunochemical and immunofluorescence techniques to contain alpha-spectrin (fodrin). alpha-Spectrin appeared to be organized as a randomly distributed reticular network, localized to the surface of isolated neuronal cellular structures. In addition, alpha-spectrin was also distributed nonrandomly at specialized cellular sites. These sites included synaptic junctions and morphologically differentiated nodes of Ranvier (i.e., rabbit axons, but not goldfish axons). At the latter sites, it is possible to demonstrate that alpha-spectrin is co-localized with F-actin, as indicated by a striking correspondence of fluorescent images due to double labeling, using the indirect immunofluorescence technique with alpha-spectrin antiserum, and direct binding of F-actin by rhodamine-conjugated palloidin. However, the spectrin-actin network at synaptic junctions appears to be distributed over the entire area of junctional contact and is not just restricted to postsynaptic densities. The possibility of a duality of roles of spectrin in membrane-related motile and anchorage functions is discussed.

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