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. 1973 Dec;136(4):1047–1052. doi: 10.1042/bj1361047

Intra-axonal transport and turnover of neurophysins in the rat. A proposal for a possible origin of the minor neurophysin component

Graham D Burford 1, Brian T Pickering 1
PMCID: PMC1166055  PMID: 4786526

Abstract

1. Radioactivity associated with the three neurophysins in the neural lobe of the rat was determined at intervals up to 5 weeks after an intracisternal injection of [35S]cysteine. 2. The radioactivity associated with the two major neurophysins (one supposedly associated with vasopressin and the other with oxytocin) increased linearly for 12h after the injection and the ratio of the rates of increase in the two proteins was very similar to the ratio of vasopressin to oxytocin in the gland. 3. From 12h onwards the radioactivity associated with each major neurophysin declined exponentially but the half-life of the supposed oxytocin–neurophysin (13.3 days) was shorter than that for the supposed vasopressin–neurophysin (19.8 days). 4. The kinetics of labelling of the minor neurophysin was quite different from that of the two major ones. It became slowly labelled during 3–5 days after injection and the radioactivity hardly decreased during the following 4 weeks. 5. The data could support the hypothesis that the minor neurophysin is a metabolic product of oxytocin–neurophysin. The exponential rate of disappearance of radioactivity from oxytocin–neurophysin and the minor component taken together has a rate constant similar to that for vasopressin–neurophysin (e.g. half-life=18.9 days).

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Selected References

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