Abstract

AbstractMitochondrial flow in chicken sciatic nerve has been followed using [59Fe] as a marker for mitochondrial cytochromes.Radioactively labelled iron was injected into the ventral horn of the chicken spinal cord in the region of the cell bodies of the motor neurons, whose axons pass into the sciatic nerve. Protein‐bound [59Fe] was found to move at a slow rate (1–4 mm/day) in the sciatic nerve. The total protein bound [59Fe] in the nerve reached a maximum at 9 days and then gradually diminished.The percentage of label in the mitochondria (expressed both as total and protein bound radioactivity) as compared to the total homogenate of the spinal cord increased up to 14 days and then showed a gradual levelling off.Subcellular fractionation of both spinal cord and sciatic nerve revealed that the mitochondrial fraction obtained by discontinuous gradient centrifugation had the highest specific activity of the fractions isolated. The major portion of this label is present in cytochromes a and b, localized in the mitochondria.Colchicine which has been shown to inhibit both rapid and slow axonal protein flow, markedly reduced the amount of protein bound [59Fe] in the sciatic nerve.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call