A motor neuron‐specific epitope and the low‐affinity nerve growth factor receptor display reciprocal patterns of during development, axotomy, and regeneration

Abstract
Somatic motor neurons begin to express the transmitter synthesizing enzyme, choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and the low‐affinity nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR) during embryonic development. However, as motor neurons mature in postnatal life, they lose immunoreactivity for NGFR and acquire a motor neuron‐specific epitope that is recognized by the monoclonal antibody, MO‐1. The present study was undertaken to examine the effect of nerve injury in adult rats on these three developmentally regulated markers in two populations of somatic motor neurons. Unilateral transection, ligation, or crushing of the sciatic nerve resulted in a loss of MO‐1 binding and a concomitant rise in immunoreactivity for NGFR within axotomized motor neurons in lumbar levels of the spinal cord. These changes, detectable within 5 days following nerve injury, are reversed with reinnervation, but persist if reinnervation is prevented by chronic axotomy. Thus, regulation of the expression of NGFR and the MO‐1 epitope appears to be critically dependent upon interactions between motor neurons and target muscles. These observations are also consistent with the idea that during regeneration, neurons may revert to a developmentally immature state; in motor neurons, this state is characterized by the presence of NGFRs and the absence of the MO‐1 epitope. Transection of the hypoglossal nerve, a purely motor nerve, resulted in a similar loss of MO‐1 binding and a selective rise in NGFR immunoreactivity in neurons within the ipsilateral hypoglossal motor nucleus. In addition immunoreactivity for ChAT was also lost in axotomized hypoglossal motor neurons. In contrast, injury to the sciatic nerve, which bears both sensory and motor axons, did not result in any detectable change in ChAT immunoreactivity in spinal motor neurons.