jnmaciuch
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
You may be right! It seems not to be the case for e.g. the peptides in the paper I linked (nor for most that I’m familiar with, which granted isn’t that many neuronal proteins), but in theory it seems possible.My understanding was, that could be misremembered, that in neurons you can get mRNA packaged up into riboproteins that can be shuttled along microtubules to the ends of the neurons. In this way you would have a little bit of an ability to quickly respond to signals locally with regulation at the translation level. Maybe this happens in some situations and not others.
[edit: though the time differential gained by translating later wouldn’t be that much compared to simply how much time would be needed to traffic down a long neuron. Translation tends to happen quickly barring some specific circumstances]
[edit on the edit: nope, turns it it can take much longer in the cell than I was thinking. Always good to check the literature before pulling from foggy memory I suppose]
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