Abstract

Abstract— A developmental study of proteolipids from brains of normal mice and two myelin deficient mutants, jimpy and quaking, was performed. The proteolipids were obtained by diethyl ether precipitation of washed total lipid extracts from whole brains and were analysed on polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulphate. The amount of ether precipitable material extractable from normal brains increased almost six‐fold between 12 and 21 days posr partum. This increase was not observed with the mutant mice. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of the proteolipid fraction showed it to be heterogeneous, with eight major protein bands. Two of these proteins increased rapidly in quantity in normal mice between 13 and 21 days. These two proteins were present, in severely reduced quantities in the brains of jimpy and quaking mice at all ages examined. One of these proteolipids was the major species present in proteolipid extracts from the brains of normal mature mice. This protein coelectrophoresed with proteolipid isolated from purified myelin and has been tentatively identified as the myelin proteolipid. The other proteolipid which was deficient in jimpy and quaking brains was not characterized, but it appeared to be of extra‐myelin origin, and suggests that parts of the brain other than the myelin sheath may be involved in the jimpy and quaking disorders.

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