Specificity of sensory projections to the spinal cord during development in bullfrogs
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 269 (1) , 96-108
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902690108
Abstract
Sensory neurons in dorsal root ganglia of frogs project to areas of the spinal cord they do not normally innervate following removal of adjacent ganglia at tadpole stages (Frank and Westerfield, J. Physiol (Lond.) 324:495–505, '82b). A possible explanation of this phenomenon is that sensory neurons project to wider areas of the spinal cord in tadpoles than in adult frogs and that partial deafferentation causes the retention of these widespread projections. Therefore, the specificity of sensory projections to the spinal cord in tadpoles was assessed by staining individual dorsal roots with horseradish peroxidase. Thoracic sensory neurons project to thoracic segments of the spinal cord and to the brainstem in tadpoles, like thoracic sensory neurons in adult frogs. They rarely arborize in the brachial region even at stages when no other sensory fibers arborize at this level. Furthermore, their projections are restricted to the dorsal horn at all stages. Conversely, hypoglossal sensory neurons, which project into the intermediate gray matter in the adult, also project to this area in tadpoles. The finding that sensory neurons in tadpoles only project to areas of the spinal cord that they innervate in the adult suggests that the novel projections observed following partial deafferentation of the spinal cord are actually induced by the operation. An additional finding was that forelimb afferents, which project to an area extending from the obex to midthoracic levels in adult frogs, arborize at rostral spinal levels and at thoracic levels several stages before they form projections to the region around their own dorsal root. These differences in the stages at which projections to different levels of the spinal cord develop suggest that local properties of the spinal cord may control the timing of sensory fiber arborization.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Peripheral Specification of Sensory Connections in the Spinal CordBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1988
- The development of sensory projection patterns in embryonic chick hindlimb under experimental conditionsDevelopmental Biology, 1986
- Reformation of specific synaptic connections by regenerating sensory axons in the spinal cord of the bullfrogNeurochemical Pathology, 1986
- The development and postnatal organization of primary afferent projections to the rat thoracic spinal cordJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1983
- Evidence that the early postnatal restriction of the cells of origin of the callosal projection is due to the elimination of axonal collaterals rather than to the death of neuronsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1981
- Topography of cutaneous spinal ganglion cells in the frog(Rana esculenta)Brain Research, 1978
- A comparison of the reflex organization of thoracic and lumbar segments in the frog spinal cordBrain Research, 1977
- Acetylcholine sensitivity changes in tadpole tail muscle fibers innervated by developing motor neuronsJournal of Neurobiology, 1975
- A morphological investigation of an early reflex pathway in developing rat spinal cordJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1973
- Development of reflex mechanisms in the spinal cord of albino rat embryos. Correlations between structure and function, and comparisons with the cat and the chickJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1936