Contributions of Pathway and Neuron to Preferential Motor Reinnervation
Open Access
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 18 (21) , 8674-8681
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.18-21-08674.1998
Abstract
Motor axons regenerating after transection of mixed nerve preferentially reinnervate distal muscle branches, a process termed preferential motor reinnervation (PMR). Motor axon collaterals appear to enter both cutaneous and muscle Schwann cell tubes on a random basis. Double-labeling studies suggest that PMR is generated by pruning collaterals from cutaneous pathways while maintaining those in motor pathways (the “pruning hypothesis”). If all collaterals projecting to muscle are saved, then stimulation of regenerative sprouting should increase specificity by increasing the number of motoneurons with at least one collateral in a muscle pathway. In the current experiments, collateral sprouting is stimulated by crushing the nerve proximal to the repair site before suture, a maneuver that also conditions the neuron and predegenerates the distal pathway. Control experiments are performed to separate these effects from those of collateral generation. Experiments were performed on the rat femoral nerve and evaluated by exposing its terminal cutaneous and muscle branches to HRP or Fluoro-Gold. Crush proximal to the repair site increased motor axon collaterals at least fivefold and significantly increased the percentage of correctly projecting motoneurons, consistent with the pruning hypothesis. Conditioning the nerve with distal crushes before repair had no effect on specificity. A graft model was used to separate the effects of collateral generation and distal stump predegeneration. Previous crush of the proximal femoral nerve significantly increased the specificity of fresh graft reinnervation. Stimulation of regenerative collateral sprouting thus increased PMR, confirming the pruning hypothesis. However, this effect was overshadowed by the dramatic specificity with which predegenerated grafts were reinnervated by fresh uncrushed proximal axons. These unexpected effects of predegeneration on specificity could involve a variety of possible mechanisms and warrant further study because of their mechanistic and clinical implications.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chick wing innervation. II. Morphology of motor and sensory axons and their growth cones during early developmentJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1995
- Identification of myelin-associated glycoprotein as a major myelin-derived inhibitor of neurite growthNeuron, 1994
- A novel role for myelin-associated glycoprotein as an inhibitor of axonal regenerationNeuron, 1994
- Differential expression of mRNAs for neurotrophins and their receptors after axotomy of the sciatic nerve.The Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Conditioning nerve crush accelerates cytoskeletal protein transport in sprouts that form after a subsequent crushJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1991
- Modulation of the pattern of axonal projections of a leech motor neuron by ablation or transplantation of its targetNeuron, 1988
- Enhancement of the conditioning lesion effect in rat sciatic motor axons after superimposition of conditioning and test lesionsExperimental Neurology, 1985
- Effect of a conditioning lesion on axonal sprout formation at nodes of ranvierJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1985
- A quantitative study of the reinnervation of the goldfish optic tectum following optic nerve crushJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Importance of fixation in immunohistochemistry: use of formaldehyde solutions at variable pH for the localization of tyrosine hydroxylase.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1981