Dissociation of Myelin from its‘Enzyme Markers’During Ontogeny

Abstract
To avoid any membrane loss, total particulate material prepared from rat forebrain and spinal cord of different ages was fractionated on linear sucrose gradients. Particle distribution, proteins and enzyme activities were measured. Beginning at early ages, optical density increases were observed around 0.60 M-sucrose, which corresponded to myelin deposition, and were expressed by the appearance of typical myelin proteins, which paralleled the peak activity of myelin-associated enzymes. During later development myelin proteins were found over a broad density range together with optical density shifts to higher (forebrain) and lower (spinal cord) values. In both regions myelin-associated enzymes shifted to heavier densities and were dissociated from the density region commonly considered to be compacted myelin.