Abstract

Abstract— —The contribution of axonal transport to the production of myelin proteins and glycoproteins was investigated using the double labelling technique of combined intraocular and intracerebral injections in the same animal. Myelin and an axolemma‐enriched fraction were isolated from pooled optic nerves, chiasma and optic tracts. Separation by gel electrophoresis showed that typical myelin proteins and glycoproteins were only significantly labelled by intracerebral injection. Intraocular injection labelled high molecular weight proteins other than the major Wolfgram protein and the major myelin glycoprotein. Fifteen days after intraocular injection the label was concentrated in a high molecular weight protein which migrated slightly more slowly than the major Wolfgram protein. The pattern of proteins and glycoproteins in myelin labelled by intraocular injection was very similar to that obtained in the axolemma‐enriched fraction by the same route. These results indicate that neuronal metabolism and axonal transport do not contribute significantly to the synthesis of specific myelin proteins and glycoproteins, but suggest that the components of myelin fractions which are labelled by intraocular injection are contaminants of axolemmal origin. One of these glycoproteins may prove a useful marker of axolemma membranes.

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