Differences in lipid composition between isolated growth cones from the forebrain and those from the brainstem in the fetal rat.
The lipid composition of nerve growth cone membranes isolated from rat fetal forebrain or brainstem by the sucrose density gradient method was analyzed biochemically and immunochemically. In the forebrain, growth cone membrane (GCM) contained lower levels of gangliosides than those from other heavier fractions, but it was not the case in the fetal brainstem at the same developmental stage. The distinctive features in the ganglioside composition of GCM are the predominance of GD3 and the presence of c-series gangliosides that are due to fetal expression in mammals. A unique acidic glycolipid, sulfoglucuronylparagloboside (SGPG), which is not present in adult brains, was first detected in both forebrain and brainstem GCM. Including such minor species, the ganglioside composition in forebrain or brainstem GCM was almost identical to other membrane fractions from the forebrain or brainstem. The compositional ratios of the major lipid classes in membranes, cholesterol and phospholipids, seemed to be common to forebrain GCM and brainstem GCM, as indicated by the identical values of phospholipid-to-protein (PL/ Pr), cholesterol-to-protein (Ch/ Pr), and cholesterol-to-phospholipid (Ch/PL) ratios for both. This study has revealed that GCM isolated from forebrain which is supposed to be at an earlier stage of neuronal differentiation than brainstem has less amounts of total gangliosides, high proportion of GD3 to GD1a and enriched c-series gangliosides as compared to brainstem GCM.[1]References
- Differences in lipid composition between isolated growth cones from the forebrain and those from the brainstem in the fetal rat. Igarashi, M., Waki, H., Hirota, M., Hirabayashi, Y., Obata, K., Ando, S. Brain Res. Dev. Brain Res. (1990) [Pubmed]
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