Neurofilament transport in vivo minimally requires hetero-oligomer formation.
pmid: 14561875
pmc: PMC6740570
Neurofilament transport in vivo minimally requires hetero-oligomer formation.
Neurofilament assembly requires at minimum the polymerization of neurofilament light chain (NF-L) with either neurofilament medium chain (NF-M) or neurofilament heavy chain (NF-H) subunits, but requirements for their axonal transport have long been controversial. Using a gene deletion approach, we generated mice containing only NF-L or NF-M. In vivo pulse radiolabeling analyses in retinal ganglion cell neurons revealed that NF-L alone is incapable of efficient transport, whereas nearly one-half of the normal level of NF-M is transported along optic axons in the absence of the other triplet subunits. Under these conditions, however, NF-M transport is completely abolished by deleting alpha-internexin. Our results strongly suggest that efficient neurofilament protein transport in vivo minimally requires hetero-oligomer formation. They also show that NF-M can partner with intermediate filament proteins other than the NF-H and NF-L subunits in neurons to support slow transport and possibly other functions of neuronal intermediate filaments.
- New York University United States
Male, Mice, Knockout, Macromolecular Substances, Intermediate Filaments, Axonal Transport, Axons, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Protein Subunits, Protein Transport, Intermediate Filament Proteins, Neurofilament Proteins, Animals, Female, Carrier Proteins
Male, Mice, Knockout, Macromolecular Substances, Intermediate Filaments, Axonal Transport, Axons, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Protein Subunits, Protein Transport, Intermediate Filament Proteins, Neurofilament Proteins, Animals, Female, Carrier Proteins
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