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. 1960 Mar 1;43(4):801–823. doi: 10.1085/jgp.43.4.801

Physical-Chemical Studies of Proteins of Squid Nerve Axoplasm, with Special Reference to the Axon Fibrous Protein

Peter F Davison 1, Edwin W Taylor 1
PMCID: PMC2195032  PMID: 13814536

Abstract

The proteins in the axoplasm of the squid, Dosidicus gigas, have been resolved electrophoretically into a major fraction including the fibrous protein, and possibly its structural subunits, and a minor fraction including at least two proteins with low sedimentation coefficients. A partially reversible change in the structure of the fibrous protein occurs under the action of 0.4 M salt or high pH. These experiments have been interpreted to indicate that in the intact fiber one, or a few, protofibrils are arranged helically or longitudinally along the fiber axis, and linked by electrostatic bonds. On the dissociation of these bonds the separated protofibrils assume a less extended form and sediment more rapidly than the intact fibers. Some material with a lower sedimentation rate is also released on the dissociation. This fraction may comprise smaller chain fragments. The volume fraction and the approximate refractive index of the fibers have been calculated.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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