Proliferation and relocation of developing lobster neuromuscular synapses
The development of multiterminal innervation from a single identifiable excitatory motoneuron to the lobster distal accessory flexor muscle (DAFM) was studied by serial section electron microscopy. The number, size, and location of neuromuscular synapses and presynaptic dense bars within the periphe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental biology 1982-01, Vol.90 (1), p.67-78 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The development of multiterminal innervation from a single identifiable excitatory motoneuron to the lobster distal accessory flexor muscle (DAFM) was studied by serial section electron microscopy. The number, size, and location of neuromuscular synapses and presynaptic dense bars within the peripheral branching pattern of the axon was determined in cross sections of the DAFM in 1st (24-hr-old)-, 4th (2-week-old)-, and 12th (1-year-old)-stage lobsters. The mean size of synapses remains fairly constant in these three stages but synaptic density, i.e., the number of synapses per unit length of fiber, increased more than 20-fold between the 1st and 4th stages and more than 5-fold between the 4th and 12th stages. Synaptic surface area per fiber length showed a parallel increase. Consequently there is a proliferation of synapses along the length of individual muscle fibers during primary development. Furthermore from the 1st stage where only a few fibers are innervated, synapses proliferate to many more fibers in the 4th and to all fibers in the 12th stage. The neuromuscular synapses are distributed in different proportions within the axonal branching pattern in the three stages. Based on the number and size of synapses and presynaptic dense bars, the main axon and primary branches provide almost equal amounts of innervation in the 1st stage. With further branching in the 4th stage, the main axon accounts for only 20–25% of the innervation; the primary branches for 45% and other finer branches the remainder. By the 12th-stage synapses are found only on branches other than the main axon and its primary offshoots. There is therefore a shift in innervation from the main axon to the primary branches and then to the finer branches during primary development. This shift in innervation involves the formation of new synaptic terminals and the restructuring of existing ones into axonal areas. In this way the multiterminal innervation arising from an identifiable motoneuron is remodeled. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1606 1095-564X |
DOI: | 10.1016/0012-1606(82)90212-3 |