Abstract

1. Either l-[4,5-(3)H]leucine or [Me-(3)H]choline, or both l-[U-(14)C]leucine and [Me-(3)H]-choline, were injected into the ninth dorsal root ganglion of the frog, and peripheral transport of labelled proteins and/or phospholipids, mostly phosphatidylcholine, was studied by analysis of consecutive segments of the sciatic nerve. 2. At 25 degrees C, approx. 5% of the (3)H-labelled protein was transported at the rate of 152mm/day. The rate was temperature-dependent with the Q(10) value of 2.6. The flow was completely blocked by the local application of colchicine, but was unaffected by cytochalasin D. 3. [Me-(3)H]-Choline was incorporated into phosphatidylcholine at a comparatively slow rate, but was transported in the nerve at a rate equivalent to that for (3)H-labelled proteins. 4. The simultaneous transport of phosphatidylcholine and the protein was further supported in the double-labelling experiments by an identical transport rate of (3)H-labelled phosphatidylcholine and (14)C-labelled proteins, by their identical temperature dependence, by simultaneous blockade with colchicine, and also by the parallel distribution of the two labels in subcellular fractions. Specific radioactivities on a protein basis of both (3)H and (14)C labels were highest in microsomal subfractions enriched with Na(+)-plus-K(+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase and acetylcholinesterase. It is suggested that (3)H-labelled phosphatidylcholine and (14)C-labelled proteins transported in the nerve reside in the same structural entity, most probably a membrane component.

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