Newly assembled microtubules are concentrated in the proximal and distal regions of growing axons.
Open Access
- 15 November 1992
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 119 (4) , 867-882
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.119.4.867
Abstract
We have investigated the sites of microtubule (MT) assembly in neurons during axon growth by taking advantage of the relationship between the proportion of tyrosinated alpha-tubulin (tyr-tubulin) in MTs and their age. Specifically, young (newly assembled) MTs contain more tyr-tubulin than older (more long-lived) MTs. To quantify the relative proportion of tyr-tubulin in MTs, cultured rat sympathetic neurons were permeabilized under conditions that stabilize existing MTs and remove unassembled tubulin. The MTs were then double-stained with antibodies to tyr-tubulin (as a measure of the amount of tyr-tubulin in MTs) and to beta-tubulin (as a measure of total MT mass), using immunofluorescence procedures. Cells were imaged with a cooled charge-coupled device camera and the relative proportion of tyr-tubulin in the MTs was quantified by computing the ratio of the tyr-tubulin fluorescence to the beta-tubulin fluorescence using a novel application of digital image processing and analysis techniques. The amount of tyr-tubulin in the MTs was highest in the cell body and at the growth cone; peak ratios in these two regions were approximately 10-fold higher than for the axon shaft. Moving out from the cell body into the axon, the tyr-tubulin content declined over an average distance of 40 microns to reach a constant low value within the axon shaft and then rose again more distally, over an average distance of 110 microns, to reach a peak at the growth cone (average axon length = 358 microns). These observations indicate that newly assembled MTs are concentrated in the proximal and distal regions of growing axons and therefore that the cell body and growth cone are the most active sites of MT assembly dynamics in neurons that are actively extending axons.Keywords
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