Effect of aging on the rate of axonal transport of choline-phosphoglycerides

Abstract
The anterograde axonal transport of choline-phosphoglycerides was studied in sciatic nerve motoneurons of adult (3-month-old) and aged (24-month-old) rats. After the spinal cord injection of [2-3H]glycerol, choline-phosphoglycerides; the major phospholipid class was transported along the nerve. The axonal transport rate was determined by plotting the distance covered by the front of transported radioactivity as a function of the time employed. In aged animals the rate of the choline-phosphoglyceride anterograde axonal transport was about 68% lower than that of adults; furthermore, the rate slowed down along the nerve in the proximal-distal direction. This alterated axonal transport mechanism might contribute to the degenerative processes observed in distal regions of peripheral nerve fibers of aged animals.