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Actin in Growing Nerve Cells

Abstract

AXONAL growth from developing and regenerating nerve cells is a very rapid process. The growth rate is often as high as 50 µm/h1, and the axon that emerges from a cell less than 0.1 mm in diameter can have a final length of more than a metre. Such a vigorous process, occurring in a non-dividing cell, will probably dominate the biosynthetic activity of the neurone and it is likely that proteins made in large amounts will be major components of the growing fibres. For this reason we have examined the proteins synthesized by growing neurones in the hope that there would be components we could identify and, perhaps, to which we could assign a role in neurite assembly. We have used explanted neurones growing in tissue culture because they can be obtained largely free of other cell types; and we have chosen embryonic sympathetic neurones because of the extremely rapid outgrowth of processes which can be induced by addition of the nerve growth factor (NGF)2.

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FINE, R., BRAY, D. Actin in Growing Nerve Cells. Nature New Biology 234, 115–118 (1971). https://doi.org/10.1038/newbio234115a0

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