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1.
The generation and development of muscle cells in the IVth hindlimb lumbrical muscle of the rat was studied following total or partial denervation. Denervation was carried out by injection of beta-bungarotoxin (beta-BTX), a neurotoxin which binds to and destroys peripheral nerves. Primary myotubes were generated in denervated muscles and reached their normal stable number on embryonic day 17 (E17). This number was not maintained and denervated muscles examined on E19 or E21 contained many degenerating primary myotubes. Embryos injected with beta-bungarotoxin (beta-BTX) on E12 or E13 suffered a partial loss of motoneurones, resulting in a reduced number of axons in the L4 ventral root (the IVth lumbrical muscle is supplied by axons in L4, L5 and L6 ventral roots) and reduced numbers of nerve terminals in the intrinsic muscles of the hindfoot. Twitch tension measurements showed that all myotubes in partly innervated muscles examined on E21 contracted in response to nerve stimulation. Primary myotubes were formed and maintained at normal numbers in muscles with innervation reduced throughout development, but a diminished number of secondary myotubes formed by E21. The latter was correlated with a reduction in number of mononucleate cells within the muscles. If beta-BTX was injected on E18 to denervate muscles after primary myotube formation was complete, E21 embryo muscles contained degenerating primary myotubes. After injection to denervate muscles on E19, the day secondary myotubes begin to form, E21 muscles possessed normal numbers of primary myotubes. In both cases, secondary myotube formation had stopped about 1 day after the injection and the number of mononucleate cells was greatly reduced, indicating that cessation of secondary myotube generation was most probably due to exhaustion of the supply of competent myoblasts. We conclude that nerve terminals regulate the number of secondary myotubes by stimulating mitosis in a nerve-dependent population of myoblasts and that activation of these myoblasts requires the physical presence of nerve terminals as well as activation of contraction in primary myotubes.  相似文献   

2.
The early morphogenesis of rat skeletal muscle is a biphasic process involving two sequentially generated populations of myotubes. A small population of primary myotubes appears early and is followed by a much larger population of secondary myotubes which appear progressively over a number of days. All previously published electrophysiological studies of developing muscle have failed to appreciate the relevance of biphasic myotube production. Here we reevaluate the status of early motor innervation, taking into account the wide range of sizes and levels of maturity within the two myotube populations. Evoked end-plate potentials (EPPs) were recorded from fibers of E17-20 rat sternocostalis muscles. Impaled fibers were then marked by ejection of HRP from the recording pipet, enabling ultrastructural identification of fibers from which recordings had been made. The average number of synaptic inputs per fiber increased to a peak at E19, and the rate of rise of the EPPs increased with age. The majority of impaled fibers (76%) were subsequently found to be primary myotubes, even at ages when secondary myotubes formed the majority of fibers in the muscle. Electrophysiological studies during early stages of secondary myotube development therefore sample largely from the more mature primary fibers and probably give the wrong impression of the extent and degree of polyneuronal innervation and of synaptic rearrangement within the muscle. In addition, the results show that very young secondary myotubes are distinguished by EPPs of longer latency, slower rate of rise, and smaller size than those of other types of myotubes. These results suggest that young secondary myotubes are predominantly activated by EPPs which originate in adjoining primary myotubes and propagate electronically to the secondary myotube. We propose a new model of early synaptic rearrangement which accommodates the biphasic nature of muscle development. We also suggest that secondary myotubes do not require direct neural input for the initiation of their development.  相似文献   

3.
Myotubes were isolated from enzymically disaggregated embryonic muscles and examined with light microscopy. Primary myotubes were seen as classic myotubes with chains of central nuclei within a tube of myofilaments, whereas secondary myotubes had a smaller diameter and more widely spaced nuclei. Primary myotubes could also be distinguished from secondary myotubes by their specific reaction with two monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against adult slow myosin heavy chain (MHC). Myonuclei were birth dated with [3H]thymidine autoradiography or with 2-bromo-5'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) detected with a commercial monoclonal antibody. After a single pulse of label during the 1-2 day period when primary myotubes were forming, some primary myotubes had many myonuclei labelled, usually in adjacent groups, while in others no nuclei were labelled. If a pulse of label was administered after this time labelled myonuclei appeared in most secondary myotubes, while primary myotubes received few new nuclei. Labelled and unlabelled myonuclei were not grouped in the secondary myotubes, but were randomly interspersed. We conclude that primary myotubes form by a nearly synchronous fusion of myoblasts with similar birthdates. In contrast, secondary myotubes form in a progressive fashion, myoblasts with asynchronous birthdates fusing laterally with secondary myotubes at random positions along their length. These later-differentiating myoblasts do not fuse with primary myotubes, despite being closely apposed to their surface. Furthermore, they do not generally fuse with each other, as secondary myotube formation is initiated only in the region of the primary myotube endplate.  相似文献   

4.
Roles for the integrin VLA-4 and its counter receptor VCAM-1 in myogenesis.   总被引:47,自引:0,他引:47  
Mammalian myogenesis is biphasic: primary myoblasts fuse to form primary myotubes, then secondary myoblasts align along the primary myotubes and form secondary myotubes, which comprise most of adult muscle. We provide evidence that an integrin (VLA-4) and its counter receptor (VCAM-1) have a role in secondary myogenesis. Both receptors are synthesized by cultured muscle cells: VLA-4 is induced as myotubes form, whereas VCAM-1 is present on myoblasts and myotubes. In vivo, both molecules are expressed at sites of secondary myogenesis, VLA-4 on primary and secondary myotubes, and VCAM-1 on secondary myoblasts and on regions of secondary myotubes apposed to primary myotubes. These patterns suggest that VLA-4-VCAM-1 interactions influence alignment of secondary myoblasts along primary myotubes and/or the fusion of secondary myoblasts. In support of the latter possibility, antibodies to VLA-4 or VCAM-1 inhibit myotube formation in culture.  相似文献   

5.
The pattern of innervation in 13 chicken hindlimb muscles was studied at various stages of development in order to examine the mechanisms which regulate its formation. The pattern of innervation was visualized by examining the distribution of fiber types within each muscle. It was found that the fiber type which a myotube acquired was influenced by both its time of formation and its position within a muscle. The earliest generation of myotubes (primary) had a marked tendency to become type I fibers, whereas, in contrast, the later generation of myotubes (secondary) tended to differentiate into type II fibers. There were regions of muscle, however, in which primary myotubes differentiated into type II fibers and other regions in which secondary myotubes acquired type I characteristics. During the development of some muscles the pattern of fiber types changed as a result of either a selective loss of type I fibers or, in other cases, a rearrangement of some of the initial neuromuscular contacts. These observations are consistent with the pattern of innervation of a muscle being established as a result of differential projection patterns of fast and slow motoneurons and the existence of some type of chemoaffinity where particular myotubes are preferentially innervated by particular motoneurons.  相似文献   

6.
Muscles are formed by fusion of individual postmitotic myoblasts to form multinucleated syncytial myotubes. The process requires a well-coordinated transition from proliferation, through migratory alignment and cycle exit, to breakdown of apposed membranes. Connexin43 protein and cell-cycle inhibitor levels are correlated, and gap junction blockers can delay muscle regeneration, so a coordinating role for gap junctions has been proposed. Here, wild-type and dominant-negative connexin43 variants (wtCx43, dnCx43) were introduced into rat myoblasts in primary culture through pIRES-eGFP constructs that made transfected cells fluoresce. GFP-positive cells and vitally-stained nuclei were counted on successive days to reveal differences in proliferation, and myotubes were counted to reveal differences in fusion. Individual transfected cells were injected with Cascade Blue, which permeates gap junctions, mixed with FITC-dextran, which requires cytoplasmic continuity to enter neighbouring cells. Myoblasts transfected with wtCx43 showed more gap-junctional coupling than GFP-only controls, began fusion sooner as judged by the incidence of cytoplasmic coupling, and formed more myotubes. Myoblasts transfected with dnCx43 remained proliferative for longer than either GFP-only or wtCx43 myoblasts, showed less coupling, and underwent little fusion into myotubes. These results highlight the critical role of gap-junctional coupling in myotube formation.  相似文献   

7.
(1) Cultures of differentiated muscle cells have been grown from diseased human, mouse and chick skeletal muscle, and from cardiac muscle of the myopathic hamster. (2) Methods of culture established for normal embryonic and adult skeletal muscle cells have proved suitable for cultures of diseased muscle cells. (3) Myoblasts obtained from dy2J mouse muscle crushed in vivo before explanting fuse in culture and form morphologically normal myotubes. Studies of the effects of innervation by dy2J spinal cord neurones on the differentiation of normal, dy2J and dy myotubes have been inconclusive but it is probable that innervation does not play a part in the pathogenesis of this disorder. (4) Myoblasts prepared by trypsinization of embryonic dy muscle behave normally in culture and fuse to form myotubes that appear normal. It is not clear if myoblasts that migrate from explants of adult muscle in vitro fuse. Aggregates of non-fusing cells have been described, but under other culture conditions normal and abnormal forms of myotube have been observed. dy muscle fibres fail to regenerate even when cultured with normal spinal cord explants and dy nerves are without effect on regenerating normal muscle fibres. These tissue-culture studies suggest that the dy mouse mutation is a myopathic disorder. (5) Embryonic mdg myoblasts have a normal cell cycle in vitro and fuse to form well-differentiated myotubes with cross-striations. mdg myotubes have normal electro-physiological properties but do not contract spontaneously or on depolarization. The defect in the muscle of the mdg mutant appears to be a failure of excitation-contraction coupling. (6) Cells migrate earlier from explants of adult dystrophic chick muscle than from normal muscle but dystrophic chick myotubes appear morphologically normal. Myotubes prepared from embryonic dystrophic chick muscle become vacuolated and degenerate, changes that can be prevented by anti-proteases such as antipain. Lactic dehydrogenase isozyme subunit M4 is absent from dystrophic muscle in vivo but reappears in cultured myotubes. Dystrophic myotubes innervated in culture by either normal or dystrophic neurones exhibit bi-directional lcoupling and multiple innervation. These results suggest that there are changes in dystrophic myotubes and that chick muscular dystrophy is a myopathy. (7) Cardiac muscle cells from the cardiomyopathic hamster synthesize less actin and myosin than normal cells, and Z lines in dystrophic cells are irregularly arranged. The beat frequency of myopathic cardiac cells is lower than that of normal cells and declines more rapidly. Tissue-culture studies have not been made of hamster skeletal muscle. (8) Human dystrophic myotubes do not show degenerative changes in culture and have normal histochemical reactions. RNA synthesis appears normal in dystrophic myotubes but there may be changes in adenyl-cyclase activity and protein synthesis in dystrophic cells. Morphological and biochemical changes have been found in muscle cells cultured from a case of acid-maltase deficiency but phosphorylase activity re-appeared in myotubes cultured from biopsies of phosphorylase-deficient muscle. Innervation by normal mouse nerves does not induce degenerative changes in dystrophic myotubes. (9) Studies on the origins of myoblasts in explants of muscle fibres in culture suggest that in these conditions myoblasts are derived only from satellite cells and that this process may be the same in normal and diseased muscle.  相似文献   

8.
Fusion of myogenic cells in adult murine skeletal muscle regenerating in vivo was examined at the ultrastructural level. Fusion of myoblast to myoblast, myoblast to myotube, and myotube to myotube was observed by 4 to 5 days after injury. Fusion between myogenic cells (myoblasts or myotubes) lacking a definitive glycocalyx or external lamina (basal lamina) occurred at multiple sites. It was defined by zones of cytoplasmic confluence between apposed cells at sites where contiguous segments of the cell membranes were interrupted while their edges had united resulting in linear continuity; vesicles of varying dimensions were frequent in these areas of fusion. Myoblasts were seen invaginating the surface of myofibres and again vesicles were seen in abundance in such regions. Cilia were often observed at this junctional zone suggesting that they might play a role in fusion. In the one example of probable fusion between a myotube and a myofibre, only a single area of cytoplasmic continuity was apparent.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies of denervated and cultured muscle have shown that the expression of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) in muscle is regulated by the muscle's state of innervation and that N-CAM might mediate some developmentally important nerve-muscle interactions. As a first step in learning whether N-CAM might regulate or be regulated by nerve-muscle interactions during normal development, we have used light and electron microscopic immunohistochemical methods to study its distribution in embryonic, perinatal, and adult rat muscle. In embryonic muscle, N-CAM is uniformly present on the surface of myotubes and in intramuscular nerves; N-CAM is also present on myoblasts, both in vivo and in cultures of embryonic muscle. N-CAM is lost from the nerves as myelination proceeds, and from myotubes as they mature. The loss of N-CAM from extrasynaptic portions of the myotube is a complex process, comprising a rapid rearrangement as secondary myotubes form, a phase of decline late in embryogenesis, a transient reappearance perinatally, and a more gradual disappearance during the first two postnatal weeks. Throughout embryonic and perinatal life, N-CAM is present at similar levels in synaptic and extrasynaptic regions of the myotube surface. However, N-CAM becomes concentrated in synaptic regions postnatally: it is present in postsynaptic and perisynaptic areas of the muscle fiber, both on the surface and intracellularly (in T-tubules), but undetectable in portions of muscle fibers distant from synapses. In addition, N-CAM is present on the surfaces of motor nerve terminals and of Schwann cells that cap nerve terminals, but absent from myelinated portions of motor axons and from myelinating Schwann cells. Thus, in the adult, N-CAM is present in synaptic but not extrasynaptic portions of all three cell types that comprise the neuromuscular junction. The times and places at which N-CAM appears are consistent with its playing several distinct roles in myogenesis, synaptogenesis, and synaptic maintenance, including alignment of secondary along primary myotubes, early interactions of axons with myotubes, and adhesion of Schwann cells to nerve terminals.  相似文献   

10.
The tropism of Zika virus (ZIKV) has been described in the nervous system, blood, placenta, thymus, and skeletal muscle. We investigated the mechanisms of skeletal muscle susceptibility to ZIKV using an in vitro model of human skeletal muscle myogenesis, in which myoblasts differentiate into myotubes. Myoblasts were permissive to ZIKV infection, generating productive viral particles, while myotubes controlled ZIKV replication. To investigate the underlying mechanisms, we used gene expression profiling. First, we assessed gene changes in myotubes compared with myoblasts in the model without infection. As expected, we observed an increase in genes and pathways related to the contractile muscle system in the myotubes, a reduction in processes linked to proliferation, migration and cytokine production, among others, confirming the myogenic capacity of our system in vitro. A comparison between non-infected and infected myoblasts revealed more than 500 differentially expressed genes (DEGs). In contrast, infected myotubes showed almost 2,000 DEGs, among which we detected genes and pathways highly or exclusively expressed in myotubes, including those related to antiviral and innate immune responses. Such gene modulation could explain our findings showing that ZIKV also invades myotubes but does not replicate in these differentiated cells. In conclusion, we showed that ZIKV largely (but differentially) disrupts gene expression in human myoblasts and myotubes. Identifying genes involved in myotube resistance can shed light on potential antiviral mechanisms against ZIKV infection.  相似文献   

11.
Mammalian muscles develop from two populations of myotubes; primary myotubes appear first and are few in number; secondary myotubes appear later and form most of the muscle fibres. We have made an ultrastructural study to investigate how primary and secondary myotubes in embryonic rat muscles transmit tension during the period of their development. Primary myotubes extend from end to end of the muscle from the earliest times, and attach directly to the tendon. In contrast, newly formed secondary myotubes are short cells which insert solely into the primary myotubes by a series of complex interdigitating folds along which adhering junctions occur. As the secondary myotubes lengthen and mature, their insertion is progressively transferred from the primary myotube to the tendon proper. We suggest that this variable insertion of immature secondary myotubes, combined with complex patterns of innervation and electrical coupling in developing muscle, makes it difficult to predict the overall contribution of secondary myotubes to muscle tension development. This work extends other studies showing the unique relationship between a primary myotube and its associated secondary myotubes, indicating that these may constitute a developmental compartment.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the synthesis, accumulation, and secretion of laminin, an extracellular matrix glycoprotein, during differentiation of the C2 mouse skeletal muscle cell line in culture. Myoblasts actively synthesized laminin, as measured by incorporation of [35S]methionine and by a dot-immunobinding assay. In myoblast cultures laminin accumulated in an intracellular compartment and could be extracted with a physiological salt solution containing the detergent Triton X-100. After the culture medium was replaced to promote differentiation of myoblasts to myotubes, laminin synthesis was increased, and laminin began to accumulate in the medium in soluble form. During differentiation, laminin also accumulated in an insoluble cell-associated fraction that required guanidinium chloride for extraction. Indirect immunofluorescence and immunobinding assays showed that myotubes but not myoblasts contained laminin on their external surface. The time course of increase in surface laminin paralleled that of the accumulation of insoluble laminin. These results suggest that the insoluble fraction represents laminin bound to the extracellular matrix at the cell surface. Our experiments demonstrate, contrary to previous observations, that myotube cultures synthesize and accumulate laminin, and further, that the differentiation of proliferating myoblasts to multinucleated myotubes is accompanied by increased laminin synthesis, by secretion of laminin into the medium, and by the deposition of laminin into an extracellular matrix on the myotube surface.  相似文献   

13.
The present investigation was undertaken to study the relationship between acetylcholine receptor (AchR) clustering and endplate formation within regenerating skeletal muscle grafts. Silver staining of nerves was combined with rhodamine-alpha-bungarotoxin labeling of AchR clusters in heterotopic grafts of the rat soleus muscle. Two major graft procedures were used: whole muscle grafts and grafts which lacked the zone of original motor endplates (MEP-less grafts). These categories were subdivided into standard grafts, where subsequent innervation was allowed, and noninnervated grafts, which were experimentally deprived of innervation. Grafting brought about the death and removal of muscle fibers, followed by regeneration of myotubes within surviving basal lamina sheaths. A transient population of small extra-junctional AchR clusters spontaneously appears shortly after myotube formation in all four muscle graft types. Early myotubes of whole muscle grafts (both innervated and standard grafts, prior to the time of innervation) also develop presumptive secondary synaptic clefts and large, organized aggregations of AchRs at original synaptic sites. At later times, nerves regenerating into standard whole muscle and MEP-less grafts lead to the formation of numerous ectopic endplates. In whole muscle grafts, endplates may also form at original synaptic sites. Functional graft innervation is achieved in whole muscle and MEP-less grafts as early as 20 days postgrafting. The results of this study support the existence of still-unknown factors associated with the original synaptic site which can direct postsynaptic differentiation independent of innervation. They also demonstrate that functional endplates may form in mammalian muscle grafts at both original synaptic sites and ectopic locations, thus indicating that the zone of original synaptic sites is not necessary for the establishment of numerous functional and morphologically well-differentiated endplates.  相似文献   

14.
The expression of myosin isoforms was studied during development of calf muscles in foetal and neonatal rats, using monoclonal antibodies against slow, embryonic and neonatal isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC). Primary myotubes had appeared in all prospective rat calf muscles by embryonic day 16 (E16). On both E16 and E17, primary myotubes in all muscles with the exception of soleus stained for slow, embryonic and neonatal MHC isoforms; soleus did not express neonatal MHC. In earlier stages of muscle formation staining for the neonatal isoform was absent or faint. Secondary myotubes were present in all muscles by E18, and these stained for both embryonic and neonatal MHCs, but not slow. In mixed muscles, primary myotubes destined to differentiate into fast muscle fibres began to lose expression of slow MHC, and primary myotubes destined to become slow muscle fibres began to lose expression of neonatal MHC. This pattern was further accentuated by E19, when many primary myotubes stained for only one of these two isoforms. Chronic paralysis or denervation from E15 or earlier did not disrupt the normal sequence of maturation of primary myotubes up until E18, but secondary myotubes did not form. By E19, however, most primary myotubes in aneural or paralyzed tibialis anterior muscles had lost expression of slow MHC and expressed only embryonic and neonatal MHCs. Similar changes occurred in other muscles, except for soleus which never expressed neonatal MHC, as in controls. Paralysis or denervation commencing later than E15 did not have these effects, even though it was initiated well before the period of change in expression of MHC isoforms. In this case, some secondary myotubes appeared in treated muscles. Paralysis initiated on E15, followed by recovery 2 days later so that animals were motile during the period of change in expression of MHC isoforms, was as effective as full paralysis. These experiments define a critical period (E15-17) during which foetuses must be active if slow muscle fibres are to differentiate during E19-20. We suggest that changes in expression of MHC isoforms in primary myotubes depend on different populations of myoblasts fusing with the myotubes, and that the normal sequence of appearance of these myoblasts has a stage-dependent reliance on active innervation of foetal muscles. A critical period of nerve-dependence for these myoblasts occurs several days before their action can be noted.  相似文献   

15.
We have examined a potential role for differential adhesiveness in muscle development using anin vitromodel which employed the culture of myoblasts and myotubes, (conditionally immortal myogenic cells,H2kb-tsA58), on micropatterned surfaces. These surfaces are made up of multiple alternating tracks of hydrophobic organosilane-treated glass and untreated glass (track width ranging from 5 to 100 μm). We found that myoblasts were aligned on patterns in the presence of serum, by adhering to the tracks of untreated glass, which had preferentially adsorbed serum attachment factors. However, as serum attachment factors are not sufficient for maintenance of adhesion of mature myotubes, we determined whether precoating patterns with laminin, which maintains adhesion, could still provide a differential adhesive cue. Laminin preferentially adsorbs to the hydrophobic regions resulting in alternating tracks that have adsorbed laminin or serum attachment factors. Myoblasts were less well aligned on these patterns as they could adhere both to the untreated glass and to laminin on the previously hydrophobic tracks, but did show a preference for laminin. However, cell alignment increased upon differentiation into myotubes and continued to increase as the myotubes matured. We found that the alignment of myoblasts and myotubes on patterns increased as track width increased. In addition, adhesion to laminin was required for long term survival of the myotubes. Myotubes that had formed on nonlaminin surfaces began to detach after 2 days of differentiation. Although we found that myoblasts preferentially clustered on laminin tracks, this arrangement did not influence the diameter of the myotubes formed, upon differentiation. Instead, the number of myotubes per track increased with track width, while the myotube diameter remained constant. This uniformity of myotube diameter suggests that a mechanism exists which restricts the ability of myoblasts to undergo lateral fusion. Overall, these findings suggest that differential adhesiveness could be an important mechanism for formation and survival of myotubes, and by using these patterns we have demonstrated a mechanism controlling the formation of linear myotubes by restricting the geometry of cell–cell adhesion.  相似文献   

16.
During anuran metamorphosis, larval-type myotubes in both trunk and tail are removed by apoptosis, and only trunk muscles are replaced by newly formed adult-type myotubes. In the present study, we clarified the regulatory mechanisms for specific developmental fates of adult and larval muscles. Two distinct (adult and larval) types of myoblasts were found to exist in the trunk, but no or very few adult myoblasts were found in the tail. Each type of myoblast responded differently to metamorphic trigger, 3,3',5-triiodo-L-thyronine (T(3)) in vitro. T(3)-induced cell death was observed in larval myoblasts but not in adult myoblasts. These results suggest that the fates (life or death) of trunk and tail muscles are determined primarily by the differential distribution of adult myoblasts within the muscles. However, a transplantation study clarified that each larval and adult myoblast was not committed to fuse into particular myotube types, and they could form heterokaryon myotubes in vivo. Cell culture experiments suggested that the following two mechanisms are involved in the specification of myotube fate: (1) Heterokaryon myotubes could escape T(3)-induced death only when the proportion of adult nuclei number was higher than 70% in the myotubes. Apoptosis was not observed in any larval nuclei within the surviving heterokaryon myotubes, suggesting the conversion of larval nuclei fate. (2) Differentiation of adult myoblasts was promoted by the factor(s) released from larval myoblasts in a cell type-specific manner. Taken together, the developmental fate of myotubes is determined by the ratio of nuclei types, and the formation of adult nuclei-rich myotubes was specifically enhanced by larval myoblast factor(s).  相似文献   

17.
THE FINE STRUCTURE OF MOTOR ENDPLATE MORPHOGENESIS   总被引:21,自引:13,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The fine structure of the developing neuromuscular junction of rat intercostal muscle has been studied from 16 days in utero to 10 days postpartum. At 16 days, neuromuscular relations consist of close membrane apposition between clusters of axons and groups of myotubes. Focal electron-opaque membrane specializations more intimately connect axon and myotube membranes to each other. What relation these focal contacts bear to future motor endplates is undetermined. The presence of a group of axons lying within a depression in a myotube wall and local thickening of myotube membranes with some overlying basal lamina indicates primitive motor endplate differentiation. At 18 days, large myotubes surrounded by new generations of small muscle cells occur in groups. Clusters of terminal axon sprouts mutually innervate large myotubes and adjacent small muscle cells within the groups. Nerve is separated from muscle plasma membranes by synaptic gaps partially filled by basal lamina. The plasma membranes of large myotubes, where innervated, simulate postsynaptic membranes. At birth, intercostal muscle is composed of separate myofibers. Soleplate nuclei arise coincident with the peripheral migration of myofiber nuclei. A possible source of soleplate nuclei from lateral fusion of small cells' neighboring areas of innervation is suspected but not proven. Adjacent large and small myofibers are mutually innervated by terminal axon networks contained within single Schwann cells. Primary and secondary synaptic clefts are rudimentary. By 10 days, some differentiating motor endplates simulate endplates of mature muscle. Processes of Schwann cells cover primary synaptic clefts. Axon sprouts lie within the primary clefts and are separated from each other. Specific neural control over individual myofibers may occur after neural processes are segregated in this manner.  相似文献   

18.
The chronology of development of spindle neural elements was examined by electron microscopy in fetal and neonatal rats. The three types of intrafusal muscle fiber of spindles from the soleus muscle acquired sensory and motor innervation in the same sequence as they formed--bag2, bag1, and chain. Both the primary and secondary afferents contacted developing spindles before day 20 of gestation. Sensory endings were present on myoblasts, myotubes, and myofibers in all intrafusal bundles regardless of age. The basic features of the sensory innervation--first-order branching of the parent axon, separation of the primary and secondary sensory regions, and location of both primary and secondary endings beneath the basal lamina of the intrafusal fibers--were all established by the fourth postnatal day. Cross-terminals, sensory terminals shared by more than one intrafusal fiber, were more numerous at all developmental stages than in mature spindles. No afferents to immature spindles were supernumerary, and no sensory axons appeared to retract from terminations on intrafusal fibers. The earliest motor axons contacted spindles on the 20th day of gestation or shortly afterward. More motor axons supplied the immature spindles, and a greater number of axon terminals were visible at immature intrafusal motor endings than in adult spindles; hence, retraction of supernumerary motor axons accompanies maturation of the fusimotor system analogous to that observed during the maturation of the skeletomotor system. Motor endings were observed only on the relatively mature myofibers; intrafusal myoblasts and myotubes lacked motor innervation in all age groups. This independence of the early stages of intrafusal fiber assembly from motor innervation may reflect a special inherent myogenic potential of intrafusal myotubes or may stem from the innervation of spindles by sensory axons.  相似文献   

19.
Two stages can be distinguished in the differentiation of myotomal muscle fibres in Triturus vulgaris. In the first stage only synchronously differentiating myotomal cells are engaged; in the second stage mesenchymal cells also take part in the process. Myotomal cells (primary myoblasts) fuse to form 2-3 nucleate myotubes. Only in the caudal part of the embryo mononucleate myotubes persist. The mononucleate myotubes, like polynucleate ones, occupy the whole length of the myotome. The differentiation of myotubes is accompanied by vitellolysis. At further development stages mesenchymal cells enter the intermyotomal fissure, after which they migrate to the myotomes, between the myotubes. The cells that remain in the intermyotomal fissures retain their fibroblastic potential (they synthesise collagen). Their daughter cells adjoining the myotubes acquire myogenic abilities. Their myoblastic potential is evidenced by their ability to fuse with the myotube. Fusion of secondary myoblasts (of mesenchymal origin) with the myotube results in further growth of the myotubes. In T. vulgaris myotomal myotubes and muscle fibres developing from them are of myotomal-mesenchymal origin.  相似文献   

20.
Proliferation and fusion of myoblasts are needed for the generation and repair of multinucleated skeletal muscle fibers in vivo. Studies of myocyte differentiation, cell fusion, and muscle repair are limited by an appropriate in vitro muscle cell culture system. We developed a novel cell culture technique [two-dimensional muscle syncytia (2DMS) technique] that results in formation of myotubes, organized in parallel much like the arrangement in muscle tissue. This technique is based on UV lithography–produced micro-patterned glass on which conventionally cultured C2C12 myoblasts proliferate, align, and fuse to neatly arranged contractile myotubes in parallel arrays. Combining this technique with fluorescent microscopy, we observed alignment of actin filament bundles and a perinuclear distribution of glucose transporter 4 after myotube formation. Newly formed myotubes contained adjacently located MyoD-positive and MyoD-negative nuclei, suggesting fusion of MyoD-positive and MyoD-negative cells. In comparison, the closely related myogenic factor Myf5 did not exhibit this pattern of distribution. Furthermore, cytoplasmic patches of MyoD colocalized with bundles of filamentous actin near myotube nuclei. At later stages of differentiation, all nuclei in the myotubes were MyoD negative. The 2DMS system is thus a useful tool for studies on muscle alignment, differentiation, fusion, and subcellular protein localization. (J Histochem Cytochem 56:881–892, 2008)  相似文献   

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