After intraocular injections of [3H]leucine, six regions of the visual pathway of adult rabbit were used to study the spatio-temporal pattern of the slow anterograde axonal transport of radioactive proteins associated with the particulate fraction, the water-soluble fraction and the myelin fraction. Unlike other fractions, myelin-associated labelled proteins represented a time-constant (for a given region) percentage of total tissue radioactivity. This percentage increased from the first half to the second half of the optic nerve and remained high in the chiasma and tract. The peak specific radioactivity of myelin decreased in the same direction. Myelin proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and the labelling patterns obtained in different regions and at different survival times were compared. At the peak of myelin radioactivity of a given region the label was typically associated with four protein bands, L1, L2, L3 and L4, of 40000, 44000, 62000, and 68000 mol.wts. respectively. The basic protein, the proteolipid protein and the W1 component (mol.wt. 51000-53000) of the Wolfgram proteins were not significantly labelled. The radioactivity associated with the W2 component (mol.wt 60000) of the Wolfgram proteins could be derived from the closely migrating L3 component. At shorter survival times no clear labelling pattern could be detected. At longer survival times radioactivity was almost totally localized around band L3. The results presented underline the importance of choosing appropriate experimental conditions to obtain a consistent labelling pattern of myelin-associated proteins and to investigate the possible mechanism responsible for this phenomenon.

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