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1.
Although autoradiography has demonstrated local incorporation of [3H]inositol into axonal phospholipids after intraneural injection, retrograde axonal transport of phosphatidylinositol has only been demonstrated after injection of lipid precursor into the cell body regions (L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia) of the sciatic nerve. We now report the retrograde axonal transport of inositol phospholipids synthesized locally in the axons. Following microinjection of myo-[3H]inositol into the rat sciatic nerve (50-55 mm distal to L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia), a time-dependent accumulation of 3H label occurred in the dorsal root ganglia ipsilateral to the injection site. The ratio of dpm present in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia to that in the contralateral dorsal root ganglia was not significantly different from unity between 2 and 8 h following isotope injection but increased to 10-12-fold between 24 and 72 h following precursor injection. By 24 h following precursor injection, the ipsilateral/contralateral ratio of the water-soluble label in the dorsal root ganglia still remained approximately 1.0, whereas the corresponding ratio in the chloroform/methanol-soluble fraction was approximately 20. The time course of appearance of labeled lipids in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia after injection of precursor into the nerve at various distances from the dorsal root ganglia indicated a transport rate of at least 5 mm/h. Accumulation of label in the dorsal root ganglia could be prevented by intraneural injection of colchicine or ligation of the sciatic nerve between the dorsal root ganglia and the isotope injection site. These results demonstrate that inositol phospholipids synthesized locally in the sciatic nerve are retrogradely transported back to the nerve cell bodies located in the dorsal root ganglia.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: Biochemical methods were used to study the time course of transport of choline phospholipids (labeled by the injection of [3H]choline into the ventral horn of the lumbar spinal cord) in rat sciatic nerve. Autoradiographic methods were used to localize the transported lipid within motor axons. Transported phospholipid, primarily phosphatidylcholine, present in the nerve at 6 h, continued to accumulate over the following 12 days. No discrete waves of transported lipid were observed (a small wave of radioactive phospholipid moving at the high rate would have been missed); the amounts of radioactive lipid increased uniformly along the entire sciatic nerve. In light-microscope autoradiographs, a class of large-caliber axons, presumably motor axons, retained the labeled lipid. Some lipid, even at 6 h, was seen within the myelin sheaths. Later, the labeling of the myelin relative to axon increased. The continued accumulation of choline phospholipids in the axons probably signifies their prolonged release from cell bodies and their retention in various axonal membranes, including the axolemma. The build-up of these phospholipids in myelin probably represents their transfer from the axons to the myelin sheaths surrounding them. When nerves are crushed and allowed to regenerate for 6 or 12 days, choline phospholipids transported during these times enter the regenerating nerve. In light and electron microscope autoradiographs, transported lipid was seen to be localized primarily in the regenerating axons. However, grains overlay the adjacent Schwann cell cytoplasm, indicating transported lipids were transferred from the regenerating axons to the associated Schwann cells. In addition, some cells not associated with growing axons were labeled, suggesting that phosphatidylcholine and possibly acetylcholine, carried to the regenerating axons by axonal transport, were actively metabolized in the terminal, with released choline label being used by other cells. These results demonstrate that axonal transport supplies mature and growing axons and their glial cells with choline phospholipids.  相似文献   

3.
The fast axonal transport of proteins was studied in the cat sciatic nerve after injection of [3H]leucine into the spinal ganglion or the ventral horn of the seventh lumbar segment. The amount of transported proteins after ganglion injection was linearly related to the amount of label present at the ganglion. At variable intervals after ganglion or spinal cord injection, the sciatic nerves were sectioned in some experiments. The transport of proteins continued in the peripheral nerve stump in a wavelike manner, but the advancing wave leaves a labeled trail behind. A fraction of this trail corresponds to proteins moving at slower velocities than the velocity of proteins in the wave front. Another fraction of the trail corresponds to molecules retained by the axons. Each nerve segment of 5 mm in length retains 1.5% of the transported proteins, and the profile of retained proteins along the sciatic nerves follows a single exponential function. From the proportion of retained proteins, the concentration of transported proteins at the terminals of branching axons as a function of the branching ratio was estimated. In the case of motor axons innervating the soleus muscle of the cat, the concentration of recently transported proteins at the nerve terminals would be approximately 0.83% of the proteins leaving the spinal cord. This low concentration of transported proteins at the nerve terminals may explain the lability of neuromuscular synapses when axonal transport is decreased or interrupted.  相似文献   

4.
beta,beta'-Iminodipropionitrile (IDPN), a neurotoxin, causes redistribution of neurofilaments in axons followed by the development of proximal axonal swellings and, in chronic intoxication, a distal decrease in axonal caliber. The latter changes are caused by a selective impairment in the slow anterograde axonal transport of neurofilament proteins. To assess the role of retrograde axonal transport in IDPN toxicity, we used [3H]N-succinimidyl propionate ([3H]NSP) to label covalently endogenous axonal proteins in sciatic nerve of the rat and measured the accumulation of radioactively labeled proteins in the cell bodies of motor and sensory neurons over time. IDPN was injected intraneurally 6 h or intraperitoneally 1 day before subepineurial injection of [3H]NSP into the sciatic nerve, and the animals were killed 1, 2, and 7 days after [3H]NSP injection. Neurotoxicity was assessed by electron microscopic observation of the nerves of similarly treated animals. Both intraneural and intraperitoneal injection of IDPN caused an acute reduction in the amount of labeled proteins transported back to the cell bodies. The early appearance of these changes suggests that alterations in retrograde transport may play a role in the production of the neuropathic changes.  相似文献   

5.
Reversal of axonal transport at a nerve crush.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Abstract— —We have compared retrograde axonal transport of 3H-labeled protein in normal rat motor and sensory axons, and axons which were injured by a distal ligation of the sciatic nerve. After injection of L-[3H]leucine into the vicinity of the neuron cell bodies, labeled protein was transported into the axons. A premature return of protein towards the cell bodies occurred in the injured axons, which we interpret as a reversal of axonal transport occurring at the site of injury. We estimate that reversal of transport occurred within 1.9–2.4 h of the arrival of labeled protein at the injury, and that the minimum velocity of the subsequent retrograde transport was 112–133 mm day?1. The ability of the injured axons to reverse transport developed about 0.8 h after making the injury. A large fraction of the orthograde transported protein was returned towards the cell body: it is estimated that by 28 h after labeled protein in sensory axons reached the injury, 46% of the3H-labeled protein originally transported to the injury site had been returned. In intact sensory nerves at this time only 15% of the transported protein had returned. It is suggested that axonal injury produces a sudden increase in the return of newly synthesized protein to the cell body, and that this might serve as a signal for chromatolysis.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Somatomedin C (Sm-C; insulin-like growth factor I; IGF-I) is a polypeptide (Mr 7649), often dependent on growth hormone (GH), with trophic effects on several different tissues. Monospecific IGF-I antisera were used to investigate its localization in the sciatic nerve and corresponding nerve cells, as well as its possible axoplasmic transport in the adult rat. IGF-I-like immunoreactivity was demonstrated in anterior horn motor nerve cells in the spinal cord and in spinal- and autonomic ganglion nerve cells. Faint IGF-I immunoreactivity was under normal conditions observed in axons of the sciatic nerve and in the Schwann cells. Using crush technique, accumulation of IGF-I immunoreactivity was seen in dilated axons within 2 h, both proximal and distal to the crush. However, only a small fraction of the anterogradely transported IGF-I immunoreactive material could be demonstrated to be transported in retrograde direction. Colchicine injected proximal to a crush prevented accumulation of IGF-I immunoreactivity proximal to the crush, but not distal to it.IGF-I-immunoreactive material is synthesized in the cell bodies of peripheral sensory and motor nerve cells. It is transported at rapid rates in the axoplasm of the sciatic nerve of adult rats both in anterograde and retrograde directions. We propose that axonally transported IGF-I may be released and exert trophic influence on innervated cells, tissues and organs.  相似文献   

7.
The turnover of phospholipids was compared in peripheral nerves of Trembler dysmelinating mutant and control mice, after intraperitoneal and local injection of labeled ethanolamine. In the mutant sciatic nerve, neurochemical analysis showed that [14C]ethanolamine is incorporated into EGP (ethanolamine glycerophospholipids) of the sciatic nerve at a much higher rate in Trembler mutant than in control mice. Furthermore the decay rate of 14C-labeled EGP is faster in Trembler than in normal animals. The accelerated turnover of EGP in Trembler sciatic nerve affects the diacyl-EGP while the renewal of the alkenylacyl-EGP (plasmalogens) is slower than in controls. Quantitative radioautographic study at the ultrastructural level corroborate that the initial increase of the label in Trembler nerve fibers was different in axons, Schwann cells and myelin sheaths. EM radioautographs reveal indeed that the high label content observed in Trembler axons takes place preferentially in the myelinated portions of axons and drops within 1 week. In both myelinated and unmyelinated segments of the axons, the majority of the radioactivity was contained in axolemma and smooth axoplasmic reticulum. The 10-fold increase of label found in the myelin sheath of Trembler nerve fibers at 1 day raises the question of the origin of the labeled EGP, either by a stimulated synthesis in Schwann cells or by transfer from axonally transported phospholipids. In contrast, the label of axons, Schwann cells and myelin sheaths of control nerve remains stable during the same period.  相似文献   

8.
The axonal transport of proteins, glycoproteins, and gangliosides in sensory neurons of the sciatic nerve was examined in adult rats exposed to acrylamide via intraperitoneal injection (40 mg/kg of body weight/day for nine consecutive days). The L5 dorsal root ganglion was injected with either [35S]methionine to label proteins or [3H]glucosamine to label, more specifically, glycoproteins and gangliosides. At times ranging from 2 to 6 h later, the sciatic nerve and injected ganglion were excised and radioactivity in consecutive 5-mm segments determined. In both control and acrylamide-treated animals, outflow profiles of [35S]methionine-labeled proteins showed a well defined crest which moved down the nerve at a rate of approximately 340 mm/day. Similar outflow profiles and transport rates were seen for [3H]glucosamine-labeled glycoproteins in control animals. However, in animals treated with acrylamide, the crest of transported labeled glycoprotein was severely attenuated as it moved down the nerve. This finding suggests that in acrylamide-treated animals, axonally transported glycoproteins were preferentially transferred (unloaded or exchanged against unlabeled molecules) from the transport vector to stationary axonal structures. We also examined the clearance of axonally transported glycoproteins distal to a ligature on the nerve. The observed impairment of clearance in acrylamide-treated animals relative to controls is supportive of the above hypothesis. Acrylamide may directly affect the mechanism by which axonally transported material is unloaded from the transport vector. Alternatively, the increased rate of unloading might reflect an acrylamide-induced increase in the demand for axonally transported material.  相似文献   

9.
Alterations in the axonal transport of proteins, glycoproteins, and gangliosides in sensory neurons of the sciatic nerve were examined in adult male rats exposed to acrylamide (40 mg ip/kg body wt/d for nine consecutive days). Twenty-four hours after the last dose, the L5 dorsal root ganglion (DRG) was injected with either [35S]methionine to label proteins or [3H]glucosamine to label glycoproteins and gangliosides. The downflow patterns of radioactivity for [35S]methionine-labeled proteins and [3H]glucosamine-labeled gangliosides were unaltered by acrylamide treatment. In contrast, the outflow pattern of labeled glycoproteins displayed a severely attenuated crest with no alteration in velocity, suggesting a preferential transfer with the unlabeled stationary components in the axolemma. Retrograde accumulation of transported glycoproteins and gangliosides was unaltered for at least 6 h; however, by 24 h, there was a 75% decrease in the amount of accumulated material. The accumulation of [35S]methionine-labeled proteins was not altered. Autoradiographic analysis revealed an acrylamide-induced paucity of transported radiolabeled glycoproteins selectively in myelinated axons with no effect on "nonmyelinated" axons. The pattern of transported proteins was similar in both control and acrylamide-exposed animals. These results suggest a preferential inhibition of glycosylation or axonal transport of glycoproteins in neurons bearing myelinated axons. More importantly, it suggests that interpretations of axonal transport data must be made with the consideration of alterations in selective nerve fibers and not with the tacit assumption that all fibers in the nerve population are equally affected.  相似文献   

10.
The insertion of axonally transported fucosyl glycoproteins into the axolemma of regenerating nerve sprouts was examined in rat sciatic motor axons at intervals after nerve crush. [(3)H]Fucose was injected into the lumbar ventral horns and the nerves were removed at intervals between 1 and 14 d after labeling. To follow the fate of the “pulse- labeled” glycoproteins, we examined the nerves by correlative radiometric and EM radioautographic approaches. The results showed, first, that rapidly transported [(3)H]fucosyl glycoproteins were inserted into the axolemma of regenerating sprouts as well as parent axons. At 1 d after delivery, in addition to the substantial mobile fraction of radioactivity still undergoing bidirectional transport within the axon, a fraction of label was already associated with the axolemma. Insertion of labeled glycoproteins into the sprout axolemma appeared to occur all along the length of the regenerating sprouts, not just in sprout terminals. Once inserted, labeled glycoproteins did not undergo extensive redistribution, nor did they appear in sprout regions that formed (as a result of continued outgrowth) after their insertion. The amount of radioactivity in the regenerating nerves decreased with time, in part as a result of removal of transported label by retrograde transport. By 7-14 d after labeling, radioautography showed that almost all the remaining radioactivity was associated with axolemma. The regenerating sprouts retained increased amounts of labeled glycoproteins; 7 or 14 d after labeling, the regenerating sprouts had over twice as much of radioactivity as comparable lengths of control nerves or parent axons. One role of fast axonal transport in nerve regeneration is the contribution to the regenerating sprout of glycoproteins inserted into the axolemma; these membrane elements are added both during longitudinal outgrowth and during lateral growth and maturation of the sprout.  相似文献   

11.
The injection of [2,3-3H]N-succinimidyl propionate ([3H]N-SP) into the rat sciatic nerve was used to covalently label both intra- and extra- axonal proteins. While extra-axonal proteins (e.g., myelin proteins) remained in the injection site, the intra-axonal proteins were transported in both the anterograde and retrograde directions. The mobile labeled proteins appeared to move by normal axonal transport processes because: (a) autoradiographic studies showed that they were localized exclusively within the axon at considerable distances from the injection site, (b) specific and identifiable proteins (by SDS gel electrophoresis) moved at expected rates in the anterograde direction, and (c) an entirely different profile of proteins moved in the anterograde vs. retrograde direction. This novel experimental approach to axonal transport, which is independent of de novo protein synthesis, provided a unique view of slow anterograde transport, and particularly of retrograde transport of endogenous proteins. A large quantity of a 68,000 mol wt proteins, moving at approximately 3-6 mm/day, dominated the retograde transport profile. [3H]N-SP, therefore, represents a new and unique "vital stain" which may find many applications in cell biology.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: Retrograde axonal transport of phosphatidylcholine in the sciatic nerve has been demonstrated only after injection of lipid precursors into the cell body region. We now report, however, that after microinjection (1 μl) of [methyl-3H]choline chloride into the rat sciatic nerve (35-40 mm distal to the L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia), time-dependent accumulation of 3H-labeled material occurred in dorsal root ganglia ipsilateral, but not contralateral, to the injection site. The level of radioactivity in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia was minimal at 2 h after isotope injection but was significantly increased at 7, 24, 48, and 72 h after intraneural isotope injection (n = 3–8 per time point); at these time points, all of the radiolabel in the chloroform/methanol extract of the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia was present in phosphatidylcholine. The radioactivity in the water-soluble fraction did not show a time-dependent accumulation in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia as compared with the contralateral DRGs, ruling out transport or diffusion of precursor molecules. In addition, colchicine injection into the sciatic nerve proximal to the isotope injection site prevented the accumulation of radiolabel in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia. Therefore, this time-dependent accumulation of radiolabeled phosphatidylcholine in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia is most likely due to retrograde axonal transport of locally synthesized phospholipid material. Moreover, 24 h after injection of both [3H]choline and [35S]-methionine into the sciatic nerve, the ipsilateral/contralateral ratio of radiolabel was 11.7 for 3H but only 1.1 for 35S. indicating that only locally synthesized choline phospholipids, but not protein, were retrogradely transported.  相似文献   

13.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to characterize labeled proteins transported in rat motor and sensory axons after application of 3H-leucine to the neuron cell bodies. Two types of experiments were performed: first, transported protein accumulating proximal to a ligature placed on the sciatic nerve was analyzed; second, the segment of sciatic nerve nearest to the “lwavecrest” of transported protein travelling down the nerve was analyzed. In both cases, no significant differences in peak position or amplitude were found in gels containing labeled proteins from motor or sensory axons. This may mean that the majority of fast-transported protein is involved in an axonal function common to the two types of neuron.  相似文献   

14.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to characterize labeled proteins transported in rat motor and sensory axons after application of 3H-leucine to the neuron cell bodies. Two types of experiments were performed: first, transported protein accumulating proximal to a ligature placed on the sciatic nerve was analyzed; second, the segment of sciatic nerve nearest to the "wavecrest" of transported protein travelling down the nerve was analyzed. In both cases, no significant differences in peak position or amplitude were found in gels containing labeled proteins from motor or sensory axons. This may mean that the majority of fast-transported protein is involved in an axonal function common to the two types of neuron.  相似文献   

15.
Using immunofluorescence and cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS), we investigated the short-term (1-7 days) influence of lower thoracic spinal cord transection on lumbar motor neurons. The content of calcitonin gene-related peptide- (CGRP) like immunoreactivity (LI), chromogranin A (Chr A)-LI, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-LI, Syn I-LI, and synaptophysin (p38)-LI in motor perikarya, and the anterograde and retrograde axonal transport of these substances in the sciatic nerve, were studied in nerve crush (6 h) experiments. During the week after transection, CGRP-LI in perikarya decreased, whereas Chr A-LI increased. VIP-LI, co-localized with Chr A-LI in motor perikarya, did not change after transection. The antero- and retrograde transport of CGRP-LI in the sciatic nerve, occurring in both motor and sensory axons, appeared unchanged in cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) graphs, but the microscopical picture clearly showed that large motor axons had a decreased content of CGRP-LI at 3 and 7 days posttransection, whereas thinner axons were unchanged in fluorescence intensity. The anterograde transport of Chr A-LI, present in both motor and postganglionic adrenergic axons, was decreased 1 and 3 days after lesion, but returned to control by day 7. There was a marked decrease in anterograde transport of VIP-LI, present mainly in postganglionic sympathetic axons, at day 3, but at 7 days transport was normal. The amounts of transported p38, the synaptic vesicle marker, were in the normal range during the whole period. Syn I-LI accumulation anterogradely was somewhat decreased at 3 and 7 days posttransection, and at 1 day the retrograde accumulation was significantly increased. The results suggest that removal of supraspinal input to intact lower motor neurons causes alterations in metabolism and axonal transport of organelle-associated substances, partly probably related to the complex pattern of transmitter leakage from degenerating, descending nerve terminals. These alterations appear to take place also in postganglionic sympathetic neurons in the sciatic nerve, that originate in the lumbar sympathetic chain.  相似文献   

16.
Using immunofluorescence and cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS), we investigated the short-term (1-7 days) influence of lower thoracic spinal cord transection on lumbar motor neurons. The content of calcitonin gene-related peptide- (CGRP) like immunoreactivity (LI), chromogranin A (Chr A) -LI, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-LI, Syn I-LI, and synaptophysin (p38)-LI in motor perikarya, and the anterograde and retrograde axonal transport of these substances in the sciatic nerve, were studied in nerve crush (6 h) experiments. During the week after transection, CGRP-LI in perikarya decreased, whereas Chr A-LI increased. VIP-LI, co-localized with Chr A-LI in motor perikarya, did not change after transection. The antero- and retrograde transport of CGRP-LI in the sciatic nerve, occurring in both motor and sensory axons, appeared unchanged in cytofluorimetric scanning (CFS) graphs, but the microscopical picture clearly showed that large motor axons had a decreased content of CGRP-LI at 3 and 7 days posttransection, whereas thinner axons were unchanged in fluorescence intensity. The anterograde transport of Chr A-LI, present in both motor and postganglionic adrenergic axons, was decreased 1 and 3 days after lesion, but returned to control by day 7. There was a marked decrease in anterograde transport of VIP-LI, present mainly in postganglionic sympathetic axons, at day 3, but at 7 days transport was normal. The amounts of transported p38, the synaptic vesicle marker, were in the normal range during the whole period. Syn I-LI accumulation anterogradely was somewhat decreased at 3 and 7 days posttransection, and at 1 day the retrograde accumulation was significantly increased. The results suggest that removal of supraspinal input to intact lower motor neurons causes alterations in metabolism and axonal transport of organelle-associated substances, partly probably related to the complex pattern of transmitter leakage from degenerating, descending nerve terminals. These alterations appear to take place also in postganglionic sympathetic neurons in the sciatic nerve, that originate in the lumbar sympathetic chain. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Axonal transport of labelled protein was studied in rat sciatic nerve by analyzing nerve segments at intervals after injection of L-[3H]leucine into the lumbar spinal cord. Some nerves were sectioned before injection so that material in transit accumulated proximal to the section. The segments distal to the section served as controls for incorporation into the nerve of blood-borne label. An analysis of TCA-soluble and TCA-insoluble activity in cut and intact nerve segments was also made. No evidence was found for the existence of a 'superfast' component of axonal transport (velocity 2000 mm/day). Results showed that the most rapidly transported protein derived from the neuron soma had a conventional 'fast' velocity of 350-420 mm/day. There was no transport of TCA-soluble material. It is suggested that 'superfast' transport, detected in mice by other investigators, is an artefact resulting from failure to control for incorporation of circulating label into the sciatic nerve.  相似文献   

18.
S M de Waegh  V M Lee  S T Brady 《Cell》1992,68(3):451-463
Studies in Trembler and control mice demonstrated that myelinating Schwann cells exert a profound influence on axons. Extensive contacts between myelin and axons have been considered structural. However, demyelination decreases neurofilament phosphorylation, slow axonal transport, and axonal diameter, as well as significantly increasing neurofilament density. In control sciatic nerves with grafted Trembler nerve segments, these changes were spatially restricted: they were confined to axon segments without normal myelination. Adjacent regions of the same axons had normal diameters, neurofilament phosphorylation, cytoskeletal organization, and axonal transport rates. Close intercellular contacts between myelinating Schwann cells and axons modulate a kinase-phosphatase system acting on neurofilaments and possibly other substrates. Myelination by Schwann cells sculpts the axon-altering functional architecture, electrical properties, and neuronal morphologies.  相似文献   

19.
The impairment of slow axonal transport of cytoskeletal proteins was studied in the sciatic nerves of streptozocin-diabetic rats. [35S]Methionine was unilaterally injected into the fourth lumbar ganglion and spinal cord, to label the sensory and motor axons, respectively, and then the polymerized elements of the cytoskeleton and the corresponding soluble proteins were analyzed separately. In addition, the pellet/supernatant ratio for tubulin and actin was also assessed. Our results indicate that the velocity of slow component a (SCa) of axonal transport, particularly that of neurofilaments, was strongly reduced (by 60%) in sensory axons. At the same time, a decreased pellet/supernatant ratio of tubulin, possibly owing to a depolymerization of stable microtubules, was also observed. The transport of slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport was also impaired, but the extent of this impairment could not be precisely evaluated. In contrast, motor axons showed little or no impairment of both SCa and SCb at the time studied, a result suggesting a delayed development of the neuropathy in motor axons.  相似文献   

20.
Chicken sciatic nerves undergo demyelination following intraneural injection of diphtheria toxin due to a lesion at the site of injection. Paresis occurs after 1 week and lasts for approx 3 weeks; at the height of the lesion we injected [14C]Ieucine into the ventral horn cells of the spinal cord and followed the axonal transport of fast flowing labelled proteins down the sciatic nerve fibres making measurements of flow rates at two different times. The results showed the fast flowing labelled proteins were blocked at the demyelination site. We measured total protein in the nerves and examined them histologically to confirm the lesion. Further studies are in progress on the post synaptic muscle cells and the impaired nerves.  相似文献   

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