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1.
Juvenile androgen treatment during developmental synapse elimination changes the pattern of innervation in the adult levator ani (LA), an androgen-sensitive muscle (Jordan, Letinsky, and Arnold, 1989b). Most notably, such adult muscles contain an unusually high number of muscle fibers that are innervated by two or more axons indicating that these fibers are multiply innervated. Juvenile androgen treatment also increases the adult level of preterminal branching, the number of junctional sites per adult fiber, and the size of adult LA muscle fibers and motoneurons in the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB). The present study was designed to determine when in development androgen treatment is most effective in maintaining multiple innervation in adulthood and whether there are different critical periods for the different effects of juvenile androgen treatment. Male rats were castrated on 7, 21, or 34 days after birth (roughly corresponding to the beginning, middle, and end of synapse elimination in the LA muscle) and treated daily with testosterone propionate for the next 2 weeks. All rats were sacrificed at 9 weeks and their spinal cords and LA muscles were stained and analyzed. Only during the first treatment period (7-20) did androgen treatment result in increased levels of multiple innervation at 9 weeks. During this period, androgen also increased the number of junctional sites per fiber and the size of SNB somata but did not influence the adult level of preterminal branching or the diameter of adult LA muscle fibers. Androgen treatment during the two later periods increased the level of preterminal branching and the size of LA muscle fibers without influencing the level of multiple innervation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Activity and synapse elimination at the neuromuscular junction   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The neuromuscular junction undergoes a loss of synaptic connections during early development. This loss converts the innervation of each muscle fiber from polyneuronal to single. During this change the number of motor neurons remains constant but the number of muscle fibers innervated by each motor neuron is reduced. Evidence indicates that a local competition among the inputs on each muscle fiber determines which inputs are eliminated. The role of synapse elimination in the development of neuromuscular circuits, other than ensuring a single innervation of each fiber, is unclear. Most evidence suggests that the elimination plays little or no role in correcting for errant connections. Rather, it seems that connections are initially highly specific, in terms of both which motor neurons connect to which muscles and which neurons connect to which particular fibers within these muscles. A number of attempts have been made to determine the importance of neuromuscular activity during early development for this rearrangement of synaptic connections. Experiments reducing neuromuscular activity by muscle tenotomy, deafferentation and spinal cord section, block of nerve impulse conduction with tetrodotoxin, and the use of postsynaptic and presynaptic blocking agents have all shown that normal activity is required for normal synapse elimination. Most experiments in which complete muscle paralysis has been achieved show that activity may be essential for the occurrence of synapse elimination. Furthermore, experiments in which neuromuscular activity has been augmented by external stimulation show that synapse elimination is accelerated. A plausible hypothesis to explain the activity dependence of neuromuscular synapse elimination is that a neuromuscular trophic agent is produced by the muscle fibers and that this production is controlled by muscle-fiber activity. The terminals on each fiber compete for the substance produced by that fiber. Inactive fibers produce large quantities of this substance; on the other hand, muscle activity suppresses the level of synthesis of this agent to the point where only a single synaptic terminal can be maintained. Inactive muscle fibers would be expected to be able to maintain more nerve terminals. The attractiveness of this scheme is that it provides a simple feedback mechanism to ensure that each fiber retains a single effective input.  相似文献   

3.
In adult skeletal muscles, exogenous ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) induces axons and their nerve terminals to sprout. CNTF also regulates the amount of multiple innervation in developing skeletal muscles during synapse elimination, maintaining multiple innervation of muscle fibers. While CNTF may maintain multiple innervation by regulating developmental synapse elimination, it is also possible that CNTF induces the formation of new multiple innervation through a sprouting response. In this study I examined morphologically the effects of CNTF during synapse elimination in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle. Rat pups received injections of CNTF in one leg and vehicle in the other either early [postnatal day 7 (P7)-P13] or late (P14–P20) in development. The early treatment period corresponds to that time when the pattern of innervation in the EDL is converted from predominantly multiple to single innervation. The late treatment period is at the end of synapse elimination for the EDL but corresponds to the major period of synapse elimination in the levator ani (LA), allowing a comparison of effects on these two muscles from the same animals. On the day after the final injection, EDL muscles were dissected and stained with tetranitroblue tetrazolium and the resulting pattern of innervation was assessed. The present findings indicate that only the early CNTF treatment regulates the level of multiple innervation in the EDL. Moreover, the effect of early CNTF treatment was local, affecting multiple innervation only in the EDL from the CNTF-treated leg. CNTF injected during the late treatment period had no apparent effects on the EDL but had a potent effect on the pattern of innervation in the LA, significantly increasing the level of multiple innervation in this muscle. Thus, CNTF affected multiple innervation in these two muscles only if provided during the period when single innervation normally develops. There was no evidence to indicate that CNTF induced axons or their terminals to sprout during either treatment period. In conclusion, CNTF increases the level of multiple innervation, probably by regulating synapse elimination, and skeletal muscles themselves may be an important target site for CNTF action. Presumably, the sprouting response to CNTF found in adult muscle develops sometime after P21. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Young male rats were castrated at 7 days of age, and treated with testosterone propionate daily from 7 to 34 days of age. At 13 months of age, motor axons and terminals innervating the levator ani (LA) muscle were stained with tetranitroblue tetrazolium (TNBT). The number of separate axons innervating individual muscle fibers was counted, and muscle fiber diameter was measured. Previous studies have shown that this androgen treatment increases muscle fiber diameter and delays synapse elimination, measured as (1) a greater percentage of muscle fibers innervated by multiple axons and (2) larger motor units. The present results indicate that the androgenic effect on synapse elimination is permanent, in that high levels of multiple innervation persisted for 12 months after the end of androgen treatment. In contrast, the effect on muscle fiber diameter was not maintained for this period. This dissociation of androgenic effects on the pattern of innervation from androgenic effects on muscle fiber diameter offers further evidence that the androgenic maintenance of multiple innervation is not dependent on muscle fiber size. In addition, circulating testosterone levels were measured at 50 and 60 days of age in animals similarly treated with androgen or oil from 7 to 34 days of age. By 60 days of age, testosterone levels in hormone-treated animals had dropped below detectability, comparable to levels in oil-treated controls. This provides additional evidence that androgen treatment during juvenile development can have permanent effects on the adult pattern of innervation in the LA muscle.  相似文献   

5.
Young male rats were castrated at 7 days of age, and treated with testosterone propionate daily from 7 to 34 days of age. At 13 months of age, motor axons and terminals innervating the levator ani (LA) muscle were stained with tetranitroblue tetrazolium (TNBT). The number of separate axons innervating individual muscle fibers was counted, and muscle fiber diameter was measured. Previous studies have shown that this androgen treatment increases muscle fiber diameter and delays synapse elimination, measured as (1) a greater percentage of muscle fibers innervated by multiple axons and (2) larger motor units. The present results indicate that the androgenic effect on synapse elimination is permanent, in that high levels of multiple innervation persisted for 12 months after the end of androgen treatment. In contrast, the effect on muscle fiber diameter was not maintained for this period. This dissociation of androgenic effects on the pattern of innervation from androgenic effects on muscle fiber diameter offers further evidence that the androgenic maintenance of multiple innervation is not dependent on muscle fiber size. In addition, circulating testosterone levels were measured at 50 and 60 days of age in animals similarly treated with androgen or oil from 7 to 34 days of age. By 60 days of age, testosterone levels in hormone-treated animals had dropped below detectability, comparable to levels in oil-treated controls. This provides additional evidence that androgen treatment during juvenile development can have permanent effects on the adult pattern of innervation in the LA muscle.  相似文献   

6.
We have compared the development of fast and slow motor innervation in the neonatal rabbit soleus, a muscle which contains two distinct motor unit types during the early period of polyneuronal innervation. The innervation state of individual muscle fibers was ascertained using an intracellular electrode; a fluorescent dye was then injected into particular fibers to permit subsequent identification of histochemical type. We found no significant difference in the time course of synapse elimination for fast and slow motor units as judged by the percentage of fibers remaining polyneuronally innervated at two ages: 7-8 days, when most fibers are multiply innervated, and 10-11 days, when the level of polyinnervation is low. In a second experiment, we examined a phenomenon in which compound end-plate potentials were occasionally seen in muscle fibers at an age (17-23 days) well past the major episode of synapse elimination. We present evidence that this apparent polyinnervation in fact derives from an electrode-induced electrical coupling artifact and that genuinely polyinnervated fibers are very rare at this stage, if present at all.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
During the period of synapse elimination, motoneurons are impaired in their ability to generate or regenerate axonal branches: following partial denervation of their target muscle, young motoneurons do not sprout to nearby denervated fibers and after axonal injury, they fail to reinnervate the muscle. In the rat levator ani (LA) muscle, which is innervated by motoneurons in the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB), synapse elemination ends relatively late in development and can be regulated by testosterone. We took advantage of this system to determine if the end of synapse elimination and the development of regenerative capabilities by motoneurons share a common mechanism, or, alternatively, if these two events can be dissociated in time. Axotomy on or before postnatal day 14 (P14) caused the death of SNB motoneurons. By P21, toward the end of synapse elimination in the LA muscle, SNB motoneurons had developed the ability to survive axonal injury. Altering testosterone levels by castration on P7 followed by 4 weeks of either testosterone propionate or control injections did not change the ability of SNB motoneurons to survive axonal injury during development, although these same treatments alter the time course of synapse elimination in the LA muscle. Thus, we dissociated the inability of SNB motoneurons to recover from axonal injury from their developmental elimination of synaptic terminals. We also measured the effect of early axotomy on motoneuronal soma size and on target muscle weight. Axotomy on P14 caused a long-lasting decrease in the soma size of surviving SNB motoneurons, whereas motoneurons axotomized on P28 recovered their normal soma size. Axotomy on or before P7 caused severe atrophy of the target muscles, matching the extensive loss of motoneurons. However, target muscle recovery after axotomy on P14 was as good as recovery after axotomy at later ages, despite greater motoneuronal death after axotomy on P14. This result may reflect an increase in motor unit size, a decrease in polyneuronal innervation by SNB motoneurons that survive axotomy on P14, or a combination of the two. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
At developing neuromuscular synapses in vertebrates, different motor axon inputs to muscle fibers compete for maintenance of their synapses. Competition results in progressive changes in synaptic structure and strength that lead to the weakening and loss of some inputs, a process that has been called synapse elimination. At the same time, a single input is strengthened and maintained throughout adult life, consistently recruiting muscle fibers to contract even at rapid firing rates. Work over the last decade has led to an understanding of some of the cell biological mechanisms that underlie competition and how these culminate in synapse elimination. We discuss current ideas about how activity modulates neuromuscular synaptic competition, how competition leads to synapse loss, and how these processes are modulated by cell-cell signaling. A common feature of competition at neuromuscular as well as CNS synapses is that temporally correlated activity seems to slow or prevent competition, while uncorrelated activity seems to trigger or enhance competition. Important questions that remain to be addressed include how patterns of motor neuron activity affect synaptic strength, what is the temporal relationship between changes in synaptic strength and structure, and what cellular signals mediate synapse loss. Answers to these questions will expand our understanding of the mechanisms by which activity edits synaptic structure and function, writing permanent changes in neural circuitry.  相似文献   

10.
We show that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) plays a physiological role in the programmed withdrawal of synapses form neonatal muscles. First, LIF mRNA is present in embryonic skeletal muscle and is developmentally regulated. We detect high levels of LIF mRNA at embryonic day 17 (E17) in mouse hind leg muscles. The content of LIF mRNA falls 10-fold between E17 and birth and then remains low in the neonate and adult. The decrease in LIF mRNA in skeletal muscle coincides with the end of secondary myogenesis and the completion of the adult number of myofibers. Second, treatment of the mouse tensor fascia latae (TFL), a superficial muscle of the hind leg, with LIF from birth (100 ng/day), transiently delays the withdrawal of excess inputs from polyneuronally innervated myofibers by approximately 3 days. The midpoint of the process is shifted from 7.5 ± 0.5 to 10.2 ± 0.6 days of age. LIF treatment delays synapse withdrawal by altering its timing without an appreciable effect on its rate. Third, in mice homozygous for a distruption of the LIF gene, the midpoint in the reduction of multiply innervated TFL myofibers occurs 1 day earlier, at 6.5 ± 0.5 days of age. Muscle fiber number is unchanged in LIF null mice. Treatment with LIF does not alter the rate of neonatal growth, the number of muscle fibers in the TFL, or the reappearance of inputs that have been eliminated. Instead, LIF appears to delay maturation of the motor unit by transiently delaying the onset of synapse withdrawal. We hypothesize that this is a necessary component of a selective process that will operate simultaneously and equally on multiple, competing motor units. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of action potentials on elimination of mouse neuromuscular junctions (NMJ) was studied in a three compartment cell culture preparation. Axons from superior cervical ganglion or ventral spinal cord neurons in two lateral compartments formed multiple neuromuscular junctions with muscle cells in a central compartment. The loss of synapses over a 2–7-day period was determined by serial electrophysiological recording and a functional assay. Electrical stimulation of axons from one side compartment during this period, using 30-Hz bursts of 2-s duration, repeated at 10-s intervals, caused a significant increase in synapse elimination compared to unstimulated cultures (p< 0.001). The extent of homosynaptic and heterosynaptic elimination was comparable, i. e., of the 226 functional synapses of each type studied, 111 (49%) of the synapses that had been stimulated were eliminated, and 87 (39%) of unstimulated synapses on the same muscle cells were eliminated. Also, simultaneous bilateral stimulation caused significantly greater elimination of synapses than unilateral stimulation (p< 0.005). These observations are contrary to the Hebbian hypothesis of synaptic plasticity. A spatial effect of stimulus-induced synapse elimination was also evident following simultaneous bilateral stimulation. Prior to stimulation, most muscle cells were innervated by axons from both side compartments, but after bilateral stimulation, muscle cells were predominantly unilaterally innervated by axons from the closer compartment. These experiments suggest that synapse elimination at the NMJ is an activity-dependent process, but it does not follow Hebbian or anti-Hebbian rules of synaptic plasticity. Rather, elimination is a consequence of postsynaptic activation and a function of location of the muscle cell relative to the neuron. An interaction between spatial and activity-dependent effects on synapse elimination could help produce optimal refinement of synaptic connections during postnatal development. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The temperature-sensitive mutation shibire (shi) in Drosophila melanogaster is thought to disrupt membrane recycling processes, including endocytotic vesicle pinch-off. This mutation can perturb the development of nerves and muscles of the adult escape response. After exposure to a heat pulse (6 h at 30° C) at 20 h of pupal development, adults have abnormal flight muscles. Wing depressor muscles (DLM) are reduced in number from the normal six to one or two fibers, and are composed of enlarged fibers that appear to represent fiber fusion; large spaces devoid of muscle fibers suggested fiber deletion. The normal five motor axons are present in the peripheral nerve PDMN near the ganglion. However, while some motor axons pass dorsally to the extant fibers, other motor axons lacking end targets pass into an abnormal posterior branch and terminate in a neuroma, i.e., a tangle of axons and glia without muscle target tissue. Hemisynapses are common in axons of the proximal PDMN and within the neuroma, but they are rarely seen in control (no heat pulse) shi or wild-type flies. All surviving muscle fibers are innervated; no muscle tissue exists without innervation. Fibrillar fine structure and neuromuscular synapses appear normal. Fused fibers have dual innervation, suggesting correct and specific matching of target tissue and motor axons. Motor axons lacking target fibers do not innervate erroneous targets but instead terminate in the neuroma. These results suggest developmental constraints and rules, which may contribute to the orderly, stereotyped development in the normal flight system. The nature of the anomalies inducible in the flight motor system in shi flies implies that membrane recycling events at about 20 h of pupal development are critical to the formation of the normal adult nerve-muscle pattern for DLM flight muscles.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
An Attempt to Account for the Diversity of Crustacean Muscles   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Crustacean muscles are known to contain muscle fibers of variableproperties and to be innervated by phasic and/or tonic motoneuronswhich may possess synapses of diverse physiological properties.Frequently, phasic motor axons innervate short-sarcomere phasicmuscle fibers and tonic motor axons innervate long-sarcomeretonic muscle fibers, but some muscles receiving a single (tonic)motor axon contain both phasic and tonic muscle fibers. Althoughit is not known whether neural trophic influences are involvedin muscle differentiation, some neural trophic effects havebeen found in crustaceans, and it is reasonable to assume thatsuch influences may be involved in establishing the definitiveproperties of the muscle. Several other postulates must be made:(1) Phasic and tonic motor axons differ in their trophic effectiveness:(2) muscle fibers innervated relatively early in developmentby a tonic motor axon acquire the properties of tonic musclefibers, while those innervated later become intermediate orphasic muscle fibers; (3) the developmental stage of a growingor regenerating axon terminal plays a role in determinationof synaptic properties. Studies on regenerating limb buds supportthe hypothesis, which can account for the genesis of all observedtypes of crustacean neuromuscular system. Further experimentalwork is necessary to test the hypothesis.  相似文献   

15.
To examine whether the 200-kDa neurofilament protein (200K NFP) is involved in mechanically stabilizing axons, we studied the developmental appearance of immunoreactivity to nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated 200K NFP at the neuromuscular junction. Polyinnervated rat muscle fibers become singly innervated during the first 3 weeks of postnatal life through the process of synapse elimination. If production or post-translational modification of the 200K NFP is actively involved in imparting mechanical stability on neuromuscular synapses, then the selective presence of this protein in only one of several axons at each developing end plate region might make that one axon selectively resistant to elimination. The remaining axons would then be eliminated. Immunoreactivity to the 200K NFP is present on Gestational Day 14 and can be seen in more than one preterminal axon in the end plate region of a muscle fiber during the period of synapse elimination. These results suggest that the 200K NFP is present and phosphorylated early in development and, although the 200K NFP may increase the mechanical stability of axons, this increased stability does not determine the final outcome of synapse elimination.  相似文献   

16.
Regeneration of motor systems involves reestablishment of central control networks, reinnervation of muscle targets by motoneurons, and reconnection of neuromodulatory circuits. Still, how these processes are integrated as motor function is restored during regeneration remains ill defined. Here, we examined the mechanisms underlying motoneuronal regeneration of neuromuscular synapses related to feeding movements in the pulmonate snail Helisoma trivolvis. Neurons B19 and B110, although activated during different phases of the feeding pattern, innervate similar sets of muscles. However, the percentage of muscle fibers innervated, the efficacy of excitatory junction potentials, and the strength of muscle contractions were different for each cell's specific connections. After peripheral nerve crush, a sequence of transient electrical and chemical connections formed centrally within the buccal ganglia. Neuromuscular synapse regeneration involved a three-phase process: the emergence of spontaneous synaptic transmission (P1), the acquisition of evoked potentials of weak efficacy (P2), and the establishment of functional reinnervation (P3). Differential synaptic efficacy at muscle contacts was recapitulated in cell culture. Differences in motoneuronal presynaptic properties (i.e., quantal content) were the basis of disparate neuromuscular synapse function, suggesting a role for retrograde target influences. We propose a homeostatic model of molluscan motor system regeneration. This model has three restoration events: (1) transient central synaptogenesis during axonal outgrowth, (2) intermotoneuronal inhibitory synaptogenesis during initial neuromuscular synapse formation, and (3) target-dependent regulation of neuromuscular junction formation.  相似文献   

17.
Busetto  G.  Buffelli  M.  Cangiano  L.  Cangiano  A. 《Brain Cell Biology》2003,32(5-8):795-802
Synapse elimination is a general feature of the development of neural connections, including the connections of motoneurons to skeletal muscle fibers. Our work addressed two questions: (1) how the action potentials generated in the set of motoneurons innervating an individual muscle (i.e., in a motor pool) are correlated in time during development in vivo; (2) what influence different firing patterns exert on the processes of polyneuronal innervation and synapse elimination which characterize the establishment of muscle innervation. We recorded the spontaneous electromyographic activity of the tibialis anterior and soleus muscles of late embryonic and neonatal rats, identifying the firing of at least two single motor unit signals in each record. We found that a striking switch occurs a few days after birth from a highly synchronous type of firing to an asynchronous one, the first thus characterizing embryonic while the second one adult motoneurons. We also investigated the effects of an evoked synchronous type of discharge on neuromuscular synapse formation, measuring polyneuronal innervation and synapse elimination. This was done in an adult in vivo model of de novo synapse formation, while a chronic TTX nerve conduction block, placed centrally with respect to the stimulating electrodes, eliminated the natural activity of motoneurons. We found that the imposed synchronous activity greatly inhibits synapse elimination, causing polyneuronal innervation to persist. We conclude that the early synchronous firing, favors the establishment of polyneuronal innervation while the subsequent switch to an asynchronous one promotes synapse elimination.  相似文献   

18.
Nerve terminal regions in walking leg opener muscles of several crayfish of different ages (0 to 245 days after hatching) were examined by means of electron microscopy. This muscle is innervated by two axons (excitatory and inhibitory) and at maturity contains three classes of synapse: excitatory and inhibitory neuromuscular synapses, and inhibitory axo-axonal synapses. The muscle itself is initially a syncytium, which gradually becomes subdivided into distinct “muscle fibers” as the animal matures. Innervation was not found in the opener muscle just before or just after hatching, but was present in restricted locations on the inner side of the muscle within a few days of hatching. As the muscle enlarged and became subdivided, innervation appeared in various other locations. Synaptic contacts were located in young stages soon after hatching, and in later stages. Morphological differences characteristic of excitatory and inhibitory nerve terminals could be found even at the earliest stages of innervation. Both excitatory and inhibitory synapses, but particularly the former, showed evidence of progressive enlargement to a final size within the first two months, and no evidence for further enlargement of existing synapses thereafter. Synaptic maturation also involved the appearance of presynaptic “dense bodies” thought to be regions at which transmitter substance is preferentially released. Nerve terminals at different levels of maturation were observed in opener muscles of young crayfish. Clear evidence for differential maturation of the three types of synapse present in this muscle was obtained. The inhibitory neuromuscular synapses attained their final average size and developed their dense bodies sooner than the excitatory neuromuscular synapses. The inhibitory axo-axonal synapses were the last to appear and to mature.  相似文献   

19.
Herrera  Albert A.  Zeng  Yu 《Brain Cell Biology》2003,32(5-8):817-833
The embryonic development of neuromuscular junctions consists of two successive epochs, an early period marked by exuberant synapse formation and a later period marked by synapse elimination. In the frog muscles we have studied, myogenesis is protracted and overlaps the periods of synapse formation and elimination. Thus, the formative and regressive events of synaptic development do not occur in synchrony across different fibers in the muscle. We propose that local activity orchestrates a shift from synaptogenesis to synapse elimination at the level of single muscle fibers. We also present evidence that perisynaptic Schwann cells and the expression of ion channels in the sarcolemma play important roles in the development of neuromuscular junctions. Questions for future study are outlined.  相似文献   

20.
Crustacean Neuromuscular Mechanisms   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Properties of crustacean muscle fibers and neuromuscular synapsesare discussed, with particular reference to the problems offast and slow contraction, synaptic diversity, and peripheralinhibition. Electrical and mechanical responses of crustacean muscle fibersare variable, and govern to a large extent the muscle's performance.Fast and slow contractions are often mediated by distinct "phasic"and "tonic" muscle fibers, as in abdominal muscles, in whichsuch fibers are segregated into two parallel sets of muscles.In leg muscles the fibers are often heterogeneous in propertiesand innervation. In doubly-motor-innervated muscles of crabsthe axons producing fast and slow contractions preferentiallyinnervate rapidly and slowly contracting fibers, respectively. Crustacean neuromuscular synapses vary greatly in electricalbehavior and in ultrastructural characteristics. Some motoraxons possess both facilitating and nonfacilitating synapses.The proportion of the different types of synapse associatedwith a motor axon probably determines in large measure the propertiesof the postsynaptic potentials evoked by that axon. Pre-synaptic and post-synaptic inhibition both occur, sometimesin the same muscle. The latter type is more common. Pre-synapticinhibition is thought to be mediated by the action of an inhibitorytransmitter-substance on receptors of the motor nerve terminals.  相似文献   

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