Source
Department of Anatomy, Cell and Neurobiology, Marshall University School of Medicine, Huntington, West Virginia 25704-9388.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Since its initial discovery in the avian intestine, calbindin-D28K has been reported to occur in various species and tissues. Although calbindin-D28K binds calcium ions in the physiologically relevant range of intracellular calcium, its functional role in the various cell types where it has been localized remains unknown.
METHODS:
We examined the occurrence of calbindin-D28K in the brain and kidney of the testudine reptile, Trachemys scripta, by immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry using rabbit anti-sera directed against rat renal calbindin-D28K and chicken intestinal calbindin-D28K.
RESULTS:
Immunoblotting revealed the presence of calbindin-D28K in the turtle tissues. A single immunoreactive band in the 28,000 relative molecular mass region was visualized in cerebellar and renal homogenates. Immunocytochemistry revealed reaction product for the presence of calbindin-D28K in the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum, and in the distal tubular cells of the nephron. Processes as well as the perikaryon of the Purkinje cell were immunoreactive.
CONCLUSION:
This study describes the occurrence and cellular localization of calbindin-D28K in a reptilian cerebellum, and confirms the phylogenetic distribution of renal calbindin-D28K to the oldest major reptilian group.