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Axonal Transport of Polyamines in Intact and Regenerating Axons of the Rat Sciatic Nerve
26
Citations
23
References
1985
Year
The axonal transport of putrescine or its polyamine derivatives spermidine or spermine is a subject of some debate. We investigated this question by injecting [3H]putrescine into the lumbar spinal cord of the rat and measuring the accumulation of radioactivity central to ligatures placed on intact and regenerating sciatic nerves. In normal nerves, approximately twice as much radioactivity built up proximal to these ligatures 2 or 3 days after injection than at more distal ligatures used to control for accumulation of radioactivity which might be due to tissue damage alone. In regenerating nerves the amount of radioactivity accumulating at the ligature was approximately five times that at the distal ligature and two to three times greater than in intact nerves. The identity of the radioactivity in regenerating nerves, determined on an amino acid analyzer, was found to be primarily spermidine and an unknown compound that migrated as a frontal elution peak. Autoradiographic analysis showed that the radioactivity was largely confined to axons, but a significant amount of the silver grains was associated with Schwann cells and myelin sheaths surrounding labeled axons in both intact and regenerating nerves. The data indicate that polyamine derivatives of putrescine are transported axonally in rat sciatic nerves, and some of this transported material accumulates in Schwann cells surrounding the labeled axons. These processes are apparently augmented during regeneration of the injured axons.
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