The early expression of immunoreactivity for calmodulin in the nervous system of mouse embryos

1987 
Calmodulin (CaM) is a major calcium-binding protein in the brain, where its immunoreactivity is mainly localized in the neurons. In this study, ontogenical changes in the distribution of CaM in the nervous system of mouse embryos were investigated immunohistochemically using a specific antibody against CaM and an indirect immunoenzyme method. Immunoreactive staining was first observed in the marginal layer of the cranial neural tube after 9.5 days of gestation; thereafter, the amount of stained structures increased rapidly. Particularly intense staining was observed in the long neuronal processes extending from or into the brain and spinal cord primordia. Intense immunostaining was also observed in the optic nerve layer of early retinae from 12.5 days of gestation. The appearance of CaM immunoreactivity is thus an early event during neuronal differentiation, apparently concominant with the initiation of axon extension and the appearance of neurofilament proteins.
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