首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 520 毫秒
1.
The elimination of polyneuronal innervation (synapse elimination) that occurs following reinnervation was studied in sartorius muscles of adult Rana pipiens. The percentage of neuromuscular junctions that were polyneuronally innervated declined from 47% at 40-80 days after nerve crush to 22% at greater than 250 days after nerve crush. We measured the size, synaptic strength, and position of competing nerve terminals at identified dually innervated neuromuscular junctions at these two different periods of synapse elimination. Our goal was to determine if any of these parameters play a role in the competition between nerve terminals that ultimately results in the elimination of polyneuronal innervation. Our data support the hypothesis that polyneuronal innervation will persist if competing nerve terminals are of similar synaptic efficacies but will be eliminated if the competing terminals are of different synaptic efficacies. We also tested, but failed to find any evidence, that the spatial proximity of competing nerve terminals at the same synaptic site influences the elimination of polyneuronal innervation.  相似文献   

2.
The elimination of polyneuronal innervation (synapse elimination) that occurs following reinnervation was studied in sartorius muscles of adult Rana pipiens. The percentage of neuromuscular junctions that were polyneuronally innervated declined from 47% at 40–80 days after nerve crush to 22% at greater than 250 days after nerve crush. We measured the size, synaptic strength, and position of competing nerve terminals at identified dually innervated neuromuscular junctions at these two different periods of synapse elimination. Our goal was to determine if any of these parameters play a role in the competition between nerve terminals that ultimately results in the elimination of polyneuronal innervation. Our data support the hypothesis that polyneuronal innervation will persist if competing nerve terminals are of similar synaptic efficacies but will be eliminated if the competing terminals are of different synaptic efficacies. We also tested, but failed to find any evidence, that the spatial proximity of competing nerve terminals at the same synaptic site influences the elimination of polyneuronal innervation.  相似文献   

3.
There is increasing morphologic evidence that neuromuscular synapses are not rigid structures in the mature muscles of adult animals. On the contrary, they may be submitted to a continuous process of remodelling. In silver-impregnated sternocleidomastoid muscles of the young adult rat, we measured synaptic parameters such as nerve terminal length, the number of branching points of terminal arborization, and muscle fiber diameter, and used a morphometric approach to explore specific questions concerning neuromuscular remodelling. Quantitative data indicate that: (a) The complexity and maturation of the nerve endings in this muscle are very variable and the increase in branching points is not paralleled by an increase in terminal length; (b) Muscle fiber diameter is related only marginally to presynaptic parameters; (c) Accessory ending formation occurs when the original ending does not reach the mean size of endings in singly innervated areas; (d) The complexity of individual endings at dually innervated junctions is smaller than the mean development of singly innervated synapses, indicating the existence of some mutual inhibitory influence between closely spaced endings. Morphometric results suggest a continuous process of synaptic formation in this adult muscle.  相似文献   

4.
Synaptic size, synaptic remodelling, polyneuronal innervation, and synaptic efficacy of neuromuscular junctions were studied as a function of growth in cutaneous pectoris muscles of postmetamorphic Rana pipiens. Recently metamorphosed frogs grew rapidly, and this growth was accompanied by hypertrophy of muscle fibers, myogenesis, and increases in the size and complexity of neuromuscular junctions. There were pronounced gradients in pre- and postsynaptic size across the width of the muscle, with neuromuscular junctions and muscle fibers near the medial edge being smaller than in more lateral regions. The incidence of polyneuronal innervation, measured physiologically and histologically, was also higher near the medial edge. Growth-associated declines in all measures of polyneuronal innervation indicated that synapse elimination occurs throughout life. Electrophysiology also demonstrated regional differences in synaptic efficacy and showed that doubly innervated junctions have lower synaptic efficacy than singly innervated junctions. Repeated, in vivo observations revealed extensive growth and remodelling of motor nerve terminals and confirmed that synapse elimination is a slow process. It was concluded that some processes normally associated with embryonic development persist long into adulthood in frog muscles.  相似文献   

5.
In this issue, Wang et al. (2021. J. Cell Biol. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201911114) describe a phenomenon in which neuromuscular junction synapse elimination triggers myelination of terminal motor axon branches. They propose a mechanism initiated by synaptic pruning that depends on synaptic activity, cytoskeletal maturation, and the associated anterograde transport of trophic factors including Neuregulin 1-III.

Neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) are a favorite model system to study the development, maintenance, and function of neuronal synapses because of their accessibility, size, and simplicity. Although many synaptic mechanisms discovered at the peripheral NMJ have provided important insights into synaptic mechanisms in the central nervous system (CNS), the phenomena of synapse elimination and refinement remain poorly understood in both. In the peripheral nervous system (PNS), synapse elimination is an essential developmental step that removes redundant presynaptic inputs to the muscle fiber. In addition, peripheral motor axon terminals must become myelinated to facilitate rapid and synchronized acetylcholine release to the muscle fiber. However, whether these two essential events during PNS development are coordinately regulated remains unknown.The immature rodent NMJ is first innervated by many axons which are then removed until the synapse reaches a dually innervated state (1). These two axons then further compete for synaptic territory, leaving one “winner” that eventually occupies the motor endplate by the end of the second postnatal week. To determine the relationship between synapse elimination and myelination, Wang et al. (2) used the formation of paranodal junctions between axons and Schwann cells as a surrogate for myelination and then determined whether axons that occupied NMJs in a singly or dually innervated state were more or less likely to be myelinated. They found that when the NMJ is dually innervated, myelination of the terminal axon branch is inhibited; neither synaptic occupancy of the competing axons nor axon diameter influenced myelination. However, once synapse elimination at the NMJ is complete, i.e., a single axon terminal innervates the motor endplate, the winner branch becomes myelinated. Thus, synapse elimination precedes myelination of the terminal axon branch, and competition between dually innervated NMJs restricts myelination.What mechanisms regulate the coordinated maturation of the motor neuron, Schwann cell, and muscle circuit? Since previous studies showed that synapse elimination at the NMJ depends on muscle activity (3), Wang et al. (2) inhibited synapse elimination by blocking acetylcholine receptors with α-bungarotoxin (α-Btx). This inhibition of motor endplate and muscle activity increased not only the number of dually innervated NMJs, but also significantly decreased myelination of terminal axon branches of singly innervated NMJs. Thus, neuromuscular activity must induce retrograde signaling mechanisms that promote not only synapse elimination but also myelination.During synapse elimination, the microtubule cytoskeleton of retracting axons is degraded and reduced (4). In contrast, axons that singly innervate NMJs have a higher microtubule content. α-Btx–dependent block of neuromuscular transmission reduced microtubule content in axons that singly innervate NMJs. Thus, α-Btx treatment simultaneously reduces both microtubule content and myelination.To determine if a mature microtubule-based cytoskeleton is causally related to myelination, Wang et al. used spastin knockout (spastinKO) mice to artificially stabilize microtubules. Although spastinKO mice had delayed axon branch removal, stabilization of the microtubule cytoskeleton increased myelination of axons that dually innervated NMJs. Thus, the brake that synaptic competition normally places on terminal branch myelination can be overcome by increasing the mass and maturity of the microtubule cytoskeleton.How does axonal microtubule stability influence terminal axon myelination? Microtubules participate in the anterograde and retrograde transport of diverse cargoes including mitochondria and growth factors. To determine if anterograde axonal transport promotes myelination of axons that singly innervate NMJs, Wang et al. used a dominant-negative mutant of kinesin-1 heavy chain which binds cargo, but lacks the protein’s motor domain, thereby impairing transport. After confirming transport inhibition by tracking impaired movement of the β1 subunit of voltage gated sodium channels, they found that myelination and node of Ranvier formation were significantly delayed in singly innervated NMJs expressing the dominant negative kinesin. Taken together, these results suggest that synapse elimination promotes maturation of the microtubule cytoskeleton which allows more efficient delivery of promyelinating signals to the terminal branch.What could these promyelinating signals be? One obvious candidate is Neuregulin 1 type III (Nrg1-III), which has long been known to promote myelination of peripheral nervous system axons (5). Consistent with this idea, conditional deletion of Nrg1-III dramatically reduced the number of myelinated axon terminals that singly innervate NMJs but did not alter the number of dually innervated NMJs. In contrast, overexpression of Nrg1-III in a transgenic mouse removed the competition-dependent block on myelination resulting in more myelination of both dually and singly innervating axon terminals. In these same transgenic Nrg1-III mice, among those NMJs that were singly innervated, their corresponding axons had higher levels of Nrg1-III. Remarkably, even in these same transgenic overexpressers, inhibition of muscle activity reduced the amount of Nrg1-III found on singly innervated axons, consistent with the observed impairment of the microtubule-based cytoskeleton after α-Btx treatment. ERK1/2 and AKT are downstream effectors of Nrg1-III in Schwann cells and implicated in the myelination pathway. Immunostaining of Schwann cells ensheathing singly innervating axon terminals revealed higher levels of pERK and pAKT.Taken together, the experiments performed by Wang et al. (2) suggest that as multiple axons actively compete for synaptic dominance at the NMJ, the myelination of their terminal branches is delayed. Upon synapse elimination, neuromuscular activity promotes a retrograde signal that increases maturity of the microtubule cytoskeleton. Maturation of the microtubule-based cytoskeleton facilitates the transport of promyelinating signals like Nrg1-III which, when presented to Schwann cells, results in myelination of the “winner” terminal axon branch of a singly innervated NMJ (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Synapse elimination promotes myelination of terminal motor axon branches. During early development, NMJs are innervated by multiple axons that compete for endplate territory. During this time, the terminal branches of the axons are not myelinated, and the tubulin cytoskeletal network remains immature. Synaptic activity induces elimination of redundant connections, which leads the winner axon’s microtubule-based cytoskeleton to mature and increase, while the microtubule cytoskeleton is degraded in the retracting axon. The maturity of the cytoskeleton allows for kinesin dependent anterograde transport of Neuregulin 1-III, which then initiates a promyelination signaling cascade via AKT and ERK activation.To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of plasticity of myelination downstream of activity and synapse refinement in the peripheral motor nervous system. Many studies in the CNS demonstrate that de novo myelination occurs in response to neuronal activity and learning paradigms (6, 7), although the mechanisms responsible remain unknown. Thus, synapse refinement and elimination-dependent myelination may be a paradigm to uncover mechanisms of learning- and activity-dependent myelination in the CNS. Functionally, the addition of myelin to the terminal motor axon branch promotes efficient neurotransmitter release through faster action potential propagation, improved metabolic support of the axon, and more efficient depolarization of the presynaptic terminal by clustered Na+ channels at the terminal heminode (8). Whether any or all of these benefits also exist in the CNS remains unknown.This is also the first demonstration of postsynaptic activity driving myelination of a presynaptic axon. Although it is clear that a retrograde signal from the muscle promotes the further maturation and subsequent myelination of the terminal axon, the identity of this cue is unknown. One interesting candidate for a muscle-derived competition and axonal maturation cue is the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which is released during muscle activity (9). Consistent with this idea, BDNF promotes axon maturation by stimulating both actin polymerization and microtubule assembly (10). It will be interesting to test the role of trophic factors in activity-dependent synapse elimination and subsequent myelination in both the CNS and PNS.In conclusion, Wang et al. (2) is an excellent addition to a growing body of research that demonstrates how neuronal activity promotes and modulates myelination. Furthermore, it stands as another example of how using simple model systems, such as the NMJ, may provide insights and have important implications for much more complicated biological systems.  相似文献   

6.
When the nerve to an adult frog sartorius muscle is crushed, and axons are allowed to regenerate, the level of polyneuronal innervation at reinnervated neuromuscular junctions is higher than normal. With time, much of this polyneuronal innervation is reduced by the process of synapse elimination (Werle and Herrera, 1988). Using intracellular recording, we estimated the level of polyneuronal innervation in adult frog (Rana pipiens) sartorius muscles 2 years (range: 1.7-2.4 years) after crushing the sartorius nerve. We found that 27% (S.E. = 1.4%) of the junctions in muscles 2 years after reinnervation were polyneuronally innervated, whereas only 10% (S.E. = 1.2%) of the junctions in normal frog muscles were polyneuronally innervated. Thus, the synapse elimination that occurs following reinnervation does not restore the normal level of polyneuronal innervation. Histological comparisons of junctional structure between muscles 2 years after reinnervation and normal muscles revealed substantial differences. Reinnervated junctions had a greater length of synaptic gutter apposed by nerve terminal processes, more axonal inputs, more empty synaptic gutter, more instances of single synaptic gutters innervated by more than one axon, and longer lengths of nerve terminal processes that connect synaptic gutters within a junction. On the basis of this physiological and anatomical evidence, we conclude that nerve injury causes persistent changes in the pattern of muscle innervation.  相似文献   

7.
Synapse elimination was examined in the developing frog cutaneous pectoris muscle using histological and electrophysiological techniques. Morphological synapse elimination occurred in two phases. The first phase, which began at the time of metamorphosis and continued until the second to third postmetamorphic week, was characterized by a rapid decline in the number of endplates receiving greater than or equal to 3 synaptic inputs. However, 50% of the muscle fibers still remained dually innervated. This dual innervation decreased with a much slower time course; approximately 20% of the muscle fibers were dually innervated in 1- to 2-year-old frogs. During the first phase of synapse elimination no difference was noted between the distribution of acetylcholine receptors or acetylcholinesterase activity associated with the terminal arborizations formed by separate axons at one synaptic site. However, terminal arborizations formed by small diameter axons and consisting of varicosities separated by thin interconnectives became apparent during this period. Such varicose arborizations responded to nerve stimulation and released acetylcholine in proportion to their terminal length as did the nonvaricose arborizations. In addition, the number of morphological and physiological inputs at one endplate site was well correlated throughout the first phase of synapse elimination.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanisms governing synapse elimination, synaptic remodeling, and polyneuronal innervation were examined in anatomical and electrophysiological studies of frog neuromuscular junctions. There was a substantial level of polyneuronal innervation in adult junctions and this varied seasonally. Nerve terminal retraction and synapse elimination occurred during normal growth and following reinnervation. Synapse elimination was not inevitable, however. Repeated in vivo observations of some identified junctions showed that polyneuronal innervation could persist for over a year, while at other junctions it arose de novo by terminal sprouting. We concluded that polyneuronal innervation in adult muscles was governed by an equilibrium between processes of retraction and elimination on one hand, and sprouting and synaptogenesis on the other. Other observations revealed that structural remodeling was a common feature of adult junctions. Most often, remodeling involved the simultaneous growth and retraction of different parts of the same junction. The net result was usually junctional growth that, in small frogs, appeared to provide a good match between synaptic size and the electrical demands of transmission. In larger animals, pre- and postsynaptic sizes were not as well matched, providing morphological evidence for a growth-associated decline in synaptic efficacy. Finally, electrophysiology was used to describe some of the functional correlates and consequences of competitive interactions between the terminals of different axons. These results are explained by a hypothetical mechanism that involves trophic support provided by the muscle to the motoneuron, the overall level of nerve-muscle activity, and the synchrony of pre- and postsynaptic activity.  相似文献   

9.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in skeletal muscle is concentrated at neuromuscular junctions, where it is found in the synaptic cleft between muscle and nerve, associated with the synaptic portion of the myofiber basal lamina. This raises the question of whether the synaptic enzyme is produced by muscle, nerve, or both. Studies on denervated and regenerating muscles have shown that myofibers can produce synaptic AChE, and that the motor nerve may play an indirect role, inducing myofibers to produce synaptic AChE. The aim of this study was to determine whether some of the AChE which is known to be made and transported by the motor nerve contributes directly to AChE in the synaptic cleft. Frog muscles were surgically damaged in a way that caused degeneration and permanent removal of all myofibers from their basal lamina sheaths. Concomitantly, AChE activity was irreversibly blocked. Motor axons remained intact, and their terminals persisted at almost all the synaptic sites on the basal lamina in the absence of myofibers. 1 mo after the operation, the innervated sheaths were stained for AChE activity. Despite the absence of myofibers, new AChE appeared in an arborized pattern, characteristic of neuromuscular junctions, and its reaction product was concentrated adjacent to the nerve terminals, obscuring synaptic basal lamina. AChE activity did not appear in the absence of nerve terminals. We concluded therefore, that the newly formed AChE at the synaptic sites had been produced by the persisting axon terminals, indicating that the motor nerve is capable of producing some of the synaptic AChE at neuromuscular junctions. The newly formed AChE remained adherent to basal lamina sheaths after degeneration of the terminals, and was solubilized by collagenase, indicating that the AChE provided by nerve had become incorporated into the basal lamina as at normal neuromuscular junctions.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the role of nerve terminals in organizing acetylcholine receptors on regenerating skeletal-muscle fibers. When muscle fibers are damaged, they degenerate and are phagocytized, but their basal lamina sheaths survive. New myofibers form within the original basal lamina sheaths, and they become innervated precisely at the original synaptic sites on the sheaths. After denervating and damaging muscle, we allowed myofibers to regenerate but deliberately prevented reinnervation. The distribution of acetylcholine receptors on regenerating myofibers was determined by histological methods, using [125I] alpha-bungarotoxin or horseradish peroxidase-alpha-bungarotoxin; original synaptic sites on the basal lamina sheaths were marked by cholinesterase stain. By one month after damage to the muscle, the new myofibers have accumulations of acetylcholine receptors that are selectively localized to the original synaptic sites. The density of the receptors at these sites is the same as at normal neuromuscular junctions. Folds in the myofiber surface resembling junctional folds at normal neuromuscular junctions also occur at original synaptic sites in the absence of nerve terminals. Our results demonstrate that the biochemical and structural organization of the subsynaptic membrane in regenerating muscle is directed by structures that remain at synaptic sites after removal of the nerve.  相似文献   

11.
Genetic studies using a set of overlapping deletions centered at the piebald locus on distal mouse chromosome 14 have defined a genomic region associated with respiratory distress and lethality at birth. We have isolated and characterized the candidate gene Phr1 that is located within the respiratory distress critical genomic interval. Phr1 is the ortholog of the human Protein Associated with Myc as well as Drosophila highwire and Caenorhabditis elegans regulator of presynaptic morphology 1. Phr1 is expressed in the embryonic and postnatal nervous system. In mice lacking Phr1, the phrenic nerve failed to completely innervate the diaphragm. In addition, nerve terminal morphology was severely disrupted, comparable with the synaptic defects seen in the Drosophila hiw and C. elegans rpm-1 mutants. Although intercostal muscles were completely innervated, they also showed dysmorphic nerve terminals. In addition, sensory neuron terminals in the diaphragm were abnormal. The neuromuscular junctions showed excessive sprouting of nerve terminals, consistent with inadequate presynaptic stimulation of the muscle. On the basis of the abnormal neuronal morphology seen in mice, Drosophila, and C. elegans, we propose that Phr1 plays a conserved role in synaptic development and is a candidate gene for respiratory distress and ventilatory disorders that arise from defective neuronal control of breathing.  相似文献   

12.
A light microscopy morphometric study was performed in singly innervated synaptic areas of the triangularis sterni muscle of the normal adult Swiss mouse. Investigating mechanisms of the motor nerve growth control, we tested the hypothesis that significant differences in the nerve terminal branching pattern can be detected between different populations of nerve endings classified according to their arborization complexity or size. The main observations of this morphometric study are first, that the mean segment length of the terminal arborization between branch points behaves as an independent variable from the remaining parameters; the mean value of this parameter did not change in nerve endings of differing size and complexity. Secondly, the increase in size of the nerve endings is accompanied by a significant reduction in the mean length of the distal free-end segments. Results are discussed in the context of the possible regulatory mechanisms governing nerve terminal growth and remodelling.  相似文献   

13.
Pawson  P. A  Grinnell  A. D  Wolowske  B 《Brain Cell Biology》1998,27(5):361-377
The orderly arrays of intramembranous particles (IMPs) found in the p-face of freeze-fracture replicas of the frog neuromuscular junction (‘active zones’) are believed to be involved in transmitter release. Some or all of the particles represent voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. Since there is a great heterogeneity in the amount of transmitter released by different frog motor nerve terminals we sought to determine whether active zone (AZ) structure displayed a similar heterogeneity by using a novel freeze-fracture procedure providing large, intact replicas containing significant portions of motor nerve terminals from the cutaneous pectoris muscle of the frog, Rana pipiens. Using only junctions in which more than 50 AZs or more than 50 μm of nerve terminal were included in the fractures, we measured AZ length, AZ intramembranous particle density, terminal width at each AZ, space between AZs, the angle of AZ orientation with respect to the longitudinal axis of the nerve terminal, exposed pre-synaptic nerve terminal surface area and a calculated value for mean AZ length per unit terminal length. The analysis led to the following conclusions. There is an approximate 5-fold range in mean AZ length/micrometre terminal length. Terminal width is a good predictor of AZ length. Particle density does not vary significantly within a given AZ, nor between AZs from the same or different junctions. The distance between AZs is not related to AZ length, i.e. shorter AZs are no more or less likely to be closer to the adjacent AZ. The probability of release from any AZ on action potential invasion is small. If most of the IMPs are Ca2+ channels, either the probability of channel opening or the efficacy of triggering release is very low or both. That the variability in release efficacy in different terminals is much greater than ultrastructural variability in terminals suggests that regulation of release is dominated by physiological processes that do not have obvious ultrastructural correlates. On the other hand, the apparent excess of AZ relative to the number of vesicles released indicates that the amount and variability in amount of AZ is important in ways that need to be elucidated.  相似文献   

14.
M Rich  J W Lichtman 《Neuron》1989,3(6):677-688
The fate of nerve terminals following elimination of postsynaptic target cells was studied in living mouse muscle. Several days after muscle fiber damage, observations of previously identified neuromuscular junctions showed that motor nerve terminal branches had rapidly disappeared from degenerating muscle fibers. Following muscle fiber regeneration, loss of terminal branches ceased and nerve terminals regrew, reestablishing some of the original sites and adding new branches. The distribution of acetylcholine receptors reorganized in the regenerated muscle so that perfect alignment was reestablished with the newly configured nerve terminals. These results argue that the maintenance of the full complement of nerve terminal branches at a neuromuscular junction is dependent on the presence of a healthy muscle fiber. Similarly, regenerating muscle is dependent on the nerve terminal for the organization and maintenance of postsynaptic receptors.  相似文献   

15.
Lin W  Dominguez B  Yang J  Aryal P  Brandon EP  Gage FH  Lee KF 《Neuron》2005,46(4):569-579
Synapse formation requires interactions between pre- and postsynaptic cells to establish the connection of a presynaptic nerve terminal with the neurotransmitter receptor-rich postsynaptic apparatus. At developing vertebrate neuromuscular junctions, acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters of nascent postsynaptic apparatus are not apposed by presynaptic nerve terminals. Two opposing activities subsequently promote the formation of synapses: positive signals stabilize the innervated AChR clusters, whereas negative signals disperse those that are not innervated. Although the nerve-derived protein agrin has been suggested to be a positive signal, the negative signals remain elusive. Here, we show that cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is activated by ACh agonists and is required for the ACh agonist-induced dispersion of the AChR clusters that have not been stabilized by agrin. Genetic elimination of Cdk5 or blocking ACh production prevents the dispersion of AChR clusters in agrin mutants. Therefore, we propose that ACh negatively regulates neuromuscular synapse formation through a Cdk5-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Seiei Aizu 《Tissue & cell》1982,14(2):329-339
Two morphologically distinct types of neuromuscular junction on the coxal leg muscles of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana, which have been physiologically described as innervated by fast, slow and inhibitory nerve fibers, have been found. In one type of neuromuscular junction the axon terminal contains many round clear synaptic vesicles and contacts several sarcoplasmic extensions from the muscle fiber. The muscle processes adhere to the axon terminal for a short distance (short contact or SC type). The axon terminal of the other type of neuromuscular junction directly contacts the muscle fiber and no extensions of the muscle fiber are formed. The contact region is comparatively long (long contact or LC type). The nerve terminal contains many polymorphic synaptic vesicles. From a correlation of the present morphological findings and the previous physiological results, it may be suggested that the SC type of nerve terminal represents both fast and slow nerve terminals and the inhibitory terminal is of the LC type.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in the distribution of agrin and acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) were examined during reinnervation and following permanent denervation as a means of understanding mechanisms controlling the distribution of these molecules. Following nerve damage in the peripheral nervous system, regenerating nerve terminals preferentially return to previous synaptic sites leading to the restoration of synaptic activity. However, not all portions of original synaptic sites are reoccupied: Some of the synaptic sites are abandoned by both the nerve terminal and the Schwann cell. Abandoned synaptic sites contain agrin, AChRs, and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) without an overlying nerve terminal or Schwann cell providing a unique location to observe changes in the distribution of these synapse-specific molecules. The distribution of anti-agrin and AChR staining at abandoned synaptic sites was altered during the process of reinnervation, changing from a dense, wide distribution to a punctate, pale pattern, and finally becoming entirely absent. Agrin and AChRs were removed from abandoned synaptic sites in reinnervated frog neuromuscular junctions, while in contralateral muscles which were permanently denervated, anti-agrin and AChR staining remained at abandoned synaptic sites. Decreasing synaptic activity during reinnervation delayed the removal of agrin and AChRs from abandoned synaptic sites. Altogether, these results support the hypothesis that synaptic activity controls a cellular mechanism that directs the removal of agrin from synaptic basal lamina and the loss of agrin leads to the dispersal of AChRs. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 33: 999–1018, 1997  相似文献   

18.
Neuromuscular synapse elimination, Wallerian degeneration and peripheral neuropathies are not normally considered as related phenomena. However, recent studies of mutant and transgenic mice, particularly the Wld S mutant—in which orthograde degeneration is delayed following axotomy—suggest that re-evaluation of possible links between natural, traumatic and pathogenic regression of synapses may be warranted. During developmental synapse elimination from polyneuronally innervated junctions, some motor nerve terminals progressively and asynchronously vacate motor endplates. A form of asynchronous synapse withdrawal, strongly resembling synapse elimination, also occurs from mononeuronally-innervated motor endplates following axotomy in young adult Wld S mutant mice. A similar pattern is observed in skeletal muscles of several neuropathic mutants, including mouse models of dying-back neuropathies, motor neuron disease and—remarkably—models of neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's and Alzheimer's diseases. Taken together with recent analysis of synaptic remodelling at neuromuscular junctions in Drosophila, a strong candidate for a common regulatory mechanism in these diverse conditions is one based on protein ubiquitination/deubiquitination. Axotomised neuromuscular junctions in Wld S mutant mice offer favourable experimental opportunities for examining developmental mechanisms of synaptic regression, that may also benefit our understanding of how degeneration in the synaptic compartment of a neuron is initiated, and its role in progressive, whole-cell neuronal degeneration.  相似文献   

19.
Excitatory synaptic transmission is inhibited by G protein coupled receptors, including the adenosine A1, GABAB, and metabotropic glutamate receptor 7. These receptors are present in nerve terminals where they reduce the release of glutamate through activating signaling pathways negatively coupled to Ca2+ channels and adenylyl cyclase. However, it is not clear whether these receptors operate in distinct subpopulations of nerve terminals or if they are co-expressed in the same nerve terminals, despite the functional consequences that such distributions may have on synaptic transmission. Applying Ca2+ imaging and immunocytochemistry, we show that these three G protein coupled receptors coexist in a subpopulation of cerebrocortical nerve terminals. The three receptors share an intracellular signaling pathway through which their inhibitory responses are integrated and coactivation of these receptors produced an integrated response. Indeed, this response was highly variable, from a synergistic response at subthreshold agonist concentrations to an occluded response at high agonist concentrations. The presence of multiple receptors in a nerve terminal could be responsible for the physiological effects of neurotransmitter spillover from neighboring synapses or alternatively, the co-release of transmitters by the same nerve terminal.  相似文献   

20.
Donor nerves of different origins, when transplanted onto a previously denervated adult crayfish abdominal superficial flexor muscle (SFM), regenerate excitatory synaptic connections. Here we report that an inhibitory axon in these nerves also regenerates synaptic connections based on observation of nerve terminals with irregular to elliptically shaped synaptic vesicles characteristic of the inhibitory axon in aldehyde fixed tissue. Inhibitory terminals were found at reinnervated sites in all 12 allotransplanted-SFMs, underscoring the fact that the inhibitory axon regenerates just as reliably as the excitatory axons. At sites with degenerating nerve terminals and at sparsely reinnervated sites, we observe densely stained membranes, reminiscent of postsynaptic membranes, but occurring as paired, opposing membranes, extending between extracellular channels of the subsynaptic reticulum. These structures are not found at richly innervated sites in allotransplanted SFMs, in control SFMs, or at several other crustacean muscles. Although their identity is unknown, they are likely to be remnant postsynaptic membranes that become paired with collapse of degenerated nerve terminals of excitatory and inhibitory axons. Because these two axons have uniquely different receptor channels and intramembrane structure, their remnant postsynaptic membranes may therefore attract regenerating nerve terminals to form synaptic contacts selectively by excitatory or inhibitory axons, resulting in postsynaptic specification.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号