Yates A J, Warner J K, Stock S M, McQuarrie I G
Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus 43210.
Brain Res. 1989 Feb 13;479(2):277-82. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(89)91629-6.
The sciatic nerves of rats were crushed with fine forceps and allowed to survive for 3 or 7 days, at which time the 5th lumbar dorsal root ganglion was injected with [3H]glucosamine. Animals were killed 18 h later and the nerves proximal and distal to the crush site were cut into 3 mm segments. Gangliosides were purified from these segments, and radioactivity was separately measured in gangliosides, neutral glycolipids and glycoproteins. For all 3 fractions, radioactivity was distributed similarly between the crush site and point of maximum axonal elongation. A second smaller peak of ganglioside radioactivity was seen to span a few segments immediately distal to the point of maximum axonal elongation. We propose two possible explanations for this: (1) it represents ganglioside synthesis by Schwann cells (from blood-borne [3H]glucosamine) as part of the mitogenic response of these cells to the reappearance of axons; or (2) recently synthesized, transported gangliosides are released from the growth cone and taken up by adjacent mitogenic Schwann cells.