Abstract
Proteins of the paniculate fraction of sciatic nerve of rats ranging from 1 to 55 days of age were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The major myelin protein, P0, could not be detected at 1 day of age, but by 10 days it comprised from 15 to 20% of the particulate protein, the same proportion as in adult rats. Growth of nerve continued throughout the period studied. Rat sciatic nerves were incubated with [32P]orthophosphate or [3H]fucose. Particulate matter proteins from sciatic nerve (and in certain cases proteins of myelin purified from sciatic nerve) were separated by polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis and the distribution of protein and of radioactivity along the gels was determined. [32P]Phosphate appeared to label all myelin proteins. Labeling with fucose was more specific; myelin basic proteins were not fucosylated. A developmental study showed that sciatic nerves from 2‐day‐old rats could incorporate radioactive fucose and [32P]‐phosphate into several proteins at the P0 region of polyacrylamide gels. Specific radioactivity of [3H]fucose in P0 protein was highest in preparations from 5‐day‐old rats and declined by 80% over the next 5 days as it was diluted by accumulating myelin. The specific radioactivity of incorporated [32P] phosphate was high at the early age points and declined as a result of the accumulation of compact myelin. The results indicate an association of fucosylation and/or phosphorylation with some step in the formation of myelin.