We used an antiserum against purified cholinergic synaptic vesicles from Torpedo and expression screening to isolate a cDNA clone encoding synuclein, a 143 amino acid neuron-specific protein. A cDNA clone was also isolated from a rat brain cDNA library that encodes a highly homologous 140 amino acid protein. The amino terminal 100 amino acids of both proteins are comprised of an 11 amino acid repeating unit that contains a conserved core of 6 residues. The synuclein gene is expressed only in nervous system tissue, not in electric organ, muscle, liver, spleen, heart, or kidney. In the electric organ synapse Torpedo synuclein-immunoreactive proteins are found in 3 major molecular-weight classes of 17.5, 18.5, and 20.0 kDa. In the neuronal cell soma the 17.5 kDa species is predominant and immunoreactivity is localized to a portion of the nuclear envelope.
High pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) followed by bioassay on isolated snail hearts were used to locate two related peptides, termed small cardioactive peptides A and B (SCPA and SCPB) in each of the central ganglia of Aplysia. The peptides are most concentrated in the buccal ganglia, the ganglia involved in the control of feeding movements. Immunocytology with antisera raised to conjugated SCPB stained three groups of neurons in the buccal ganglia. One group consisted of relatively small neurons that were tightly clustered. The second group was comprised of larger neurons that were more scattered. The third group was made up of several neurons including the two largest in the ganglia, identified cells B1 and B2. B1 and B2 and other neurons in this group innervate the gut by way of the esophageal nerve. HPLC-bioassay of single, individually dissected B1 or B2 neurons demonstrated that the two peptides are present in a single cell. For B2, but not B1, choline injected into the cell body was converted to the conventional transmitter, acetylcholine. This indicates that, in addition to the two peptides, B2 also contains choline acetyltransferase, and raises the possibility that acetylcholine and the SCPs may act as co-transmitters in B2. Strong immunocytological staining of fibers and varicosities was observed in the neuropilar region of the cerebral, pleural, pedal, and abdominal ganglia. In addition to the buccal ganglia, immunoreactive neurons were observed in all of the other central ganglia. The high concentration of the SCPs and the relatively large number of immunoreactive neurons in the buccal ganglion suggest a particularly important role of these peptides specifically in feeding behavior. However, the widespread occurrence of the SCPs in fibers and neuronal cell bodies throughout the nervous system suggests that these peptides also may have additional behavioral functions in Aplysia.
for assistance and reagents and to I. Inman for outstanding technical assistance. This work was supported by the McKnight Foundation (T.L.S.) and a Silvio Conti Center for Neuroscience Award from the NIMH (T.L.S. and R.H.S.). A.D. was supported by an MSTP fellowship from the NIGMS (5T32 GM07365). R.W.B. was supported by a predoctoral NSF fellowship. D.L.D. was supported by a postdoctoral Muscular Dystrophy Association fellowship.
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