Purification of axonin-1, a protein that is secreted from axons during neurogenesis

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Abstract

Using selective metabolic labelling in a compartmental cell culture system two proteins, denoted axonin-1 and axonin-2, were found to be secreted by axons of dorsal root ganglia neurons from chicken embryos. Based on its characteristic coordinates and spot morphology in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, axonin-1 was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid and the vitreous fluid of the eye of the chicken embryo. Using vitreous fluid, axonin-1 was purified 476-fold to homogeneity by a four-step chromatographic procedure. The identity of the purified protein as axonin-1 was confirmed by immunological methods. Axonin-1 is a glycoprotein that subdivides into at least 16 immunologically similar isoelectric variants; their molecular weight range extends from 132 to 140 kd and their pI range from 5.3 to 6.2. In the vitreous fluid of the embryo, axonin-1 could first be detected on the embryonic day 5 and highest concentrations were measured during the second half of embryonic life; in the vitreous fluid of the adult chicken, concentrations were ~20 times lower. The early onset of secretion and the time course of expression suggest a role for axonin-1 in the development of the nervous system.

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Ruegg, M. A., Stoeckli, E. T., Kuhn, T. B., Heller, M., Zuellig, R., & Sonderegger, P. (1989). Purification of axonin-1, a protein that is secreted from axons during neurogenesis. EMBO Journal, 8(1), 55–63. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1989.tb03348.x

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