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1.
The leading tips of elongating nerve fibers are enlarged into "growth cones" which are seen in tissue culture to continually undergo changes in conformation and to foster numerous transitory slender extensions (filopodia) and/or a veillike ruffling sheet. After explantation of 1-day-old rat superior cervical ganglia (as pieces or as individual neurons), nerve fibers and tips were photographed during growth and through the initial stages of aldehyde fixation and then relocated after embedding in plastic. Electron microscopy of serially sectioned tips revealed the following. The moving parts of the cone, the peripheral flange and filopodia, contained a distinctive apparently filamentous feltwork from which all organelles except membranous structures were excluded; microtubules were notably absent from these areas. The cone interior contained varied forms of agranular endoplasmic reticulum, vacuoles, vesicles, coated vesicles, mitochondria, microtubules, and occasional neurofilaments and polysomes. Dense-cored vesicles and lysosomal structures were also present and appeared to be formed locally, at least in part from reticulum. The possible roles of the various forms of agranular membranous components are discussed and it is suggested that structures involved in both the assembly and degradation of membrane are present in the cone. The content of these growing tips resembles that in sensory neuron growth cones studied by others.  相似文献   

2.
Fine structural analysis of embryonic nerve cells undergoing axon elongation in vitro has revealed structural evidence supportive of the time lapse cinematographic observation that extensive areas of active membrane fusion are present in the distal tip of the axon. Pre-fusion membrane alignment and post-fusion strings of vesicles characterize the putative fusions between microspikes, between microspikes and growth cones, and between growth cones and the distal axon. The restriction and possible significance of these apparent fusions are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Cytoplasmic dynein transports short microtubules down the axon in part by pushing against the actin cytoskeleton. Recent studies have suggested that comparable dynein-driven forces may impinge upon the longer microtubules within the axon. Here, we examined a potential role for these forces on axonal retraction and growth cone turning in neurons partially depleted of dynein heavy chain (DHC) by small interfering RNA. While DHC-depleted axons grew at normal rates, they retracted far more robustly in response to donors of nitric oxide than control axons, and their growth cones failed to efficiently turn in response to substrate borders. Live cell imaging of dynamic microtubule tips showed that microtubules in DHC-depleted growth cones were largely confined to the central zone, with very few extending into filopodia. Even under conditions of suppressed microtubule dynamics, DHC depletion impaired the capacity of microtubules to advance into the peripheral zone of the growth cone, indicating a direct role for dynein-driven forces on the distribution of the microtubules. These effects were all reversed by inhibition of myosin-II forces, which are known to underlie the retrograde flow of actin in the growth cone and the contractility of the cortical actin during axonal retraction. Our results are consistent with a model whereby dynein-driven forces enable microtubules to overcome myosin-II-driven forces, both in the axonal shaft and within the growth cone. These dynein-driven forces oppose the tendency of the axon to retract and permit microtubules to advance into the peripheral zone of the growth cone so that they can invade filopodia.  相似文献   

4.
The behavior of axonal growth cones on surfaces with patterned variations in substratum was observed. Cells from sensory ganglia of 8-day-old chicken embryos were cultured on plastic petri dishes, plastic tissue culture dishes, and polyornithine-coated tissue culture dishes, all of which contained gridlike patterns of palladium (Pd) deposition.The results indicated that growth cones elongated on the Pd-shadowed areas vs areas lacking Pd deposits depending on the relative adhesivity of the growth cones to the substrata. In petri dishes, growth cones stay on the Pd; in tissue culture dishes, they cross from one surface to the other; and in polyornithine-coated dishes, they elongate for great distances on the Pd-free areas. Analyses of time-lapse movies showed that, on Pd-shadowed polyornithine dishes, growth cones often approach the Pd-coated areas and microspikes touch the Pd surface. Yet, the axon tip continues to elongate on the Pd-free polyornithine surface.The conclusion is offered that interactions between microspikes and the substratum adjacent to the growth cone are important determinants of the directions and pathways of axonal elongation.  相似文献   

5.
The localization of synapsin I, a synaptic vesicle-associated protein, was investigated immunocytochemically in normal nerve fibers and regenerating axonal sprouts following crush-injuries to the rat sciatic nerve. In normal myelinated axons, weak synapsin I immunoreactivity was found in the axoplasmic/smooth endoplasmic domains, but not in the cytoskeletal domains comprising neurofilaments and microtubules. In non-myelinated axons without dense cytoskeletal structures, moderate immunoreactivity was distributed diffusely throughout the axoplasm. In the crush-injured nerves, intense synapsin I immunoreactivity was demonstrated by light microscopy in early regenerating sprouts emerging from nodes of Ranvier. These nodal sprouts subsequently elongated as regenerating axons through the space between the basal lamina and the myelin sheath (or Schwann cell plasma membrane). Intense synapsin I immunoreactivity was also found in the growth cones of such long regenerating axons. Electron microscopy revealed that synapsin I immunoreactivity was associated mainly with vesicular organelles in the nodal sprouts and growth cones of regenerating axons. Long regenerating axons exhibited no synapsin I immunoreactivity in the shaft, which contained an abundance of neurofilaments. However, vesicle accumulations remaining in the periphery of the shaft still exhibited intense synapsin I immunoreactivity. Thus, it can be concluded that synapsin I is localized at especially high density in the domains comprising vesicular organelles, which are characteristic of early nodal sprouts, as well as in growth cones of regenerating axons. These findings, together with the proposed functions of synapsin I investigated in other studies, suggest that synapsin I may play important roles in vesicular dynamics including the translocation of vesicles to the plasma membrane in sprouts and growth cones of regenerating axons.  相似文献   

6.
Mechanical tension is a particularly effective stimulus for axonal elongation, but little is known about how it leads to the formation of new axon. To better understand this process, we examined the movement of axonal branch points, beads bound to the axon, and docked mitochondria while monitoring axonal width. We found these markers moved in a pattern that suggests elongation occurs by viscoelastic stretching and volume addition along the axon. To test the coupling between “lengthening” and “growth,” we measured axonal width while forcing axons to grow and then pause by controlling the tension applied to the growth cone or to the cell body. We found axons thinned during high rates of elongation and thickened when the growth cones were stationary. These findings suggest that forces cause lengthening because they stretch the axon and that growth occurs, in a loosely coupled step, by volume addition along the axon. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2010  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the movement of green fluorescent protein-tagged neurofilaments at the distal ends of growing axons by using time-lapse fluorescence imaging. The filaments moved in a rapid, infrequent, and asynchronous manner in either an anterograde or retrograde direction (60% anterograde, 40% retrograde). Most of the anterograde filaments entered the growth cone and most of the retrograde filaments originated in the growth cone. In a small number of cases we were able to observe neurofilaments reverse direction, and all of these reversals occurred in or close to the growth cone. We conclude that neurofilament polymers are delivered rapidly and infrequently to the tips of growing axons and that some of these polymers reverse direction in the growth cone and move back into the axon. We propose that 1) growth cones are a preferential site of neurofilament reversal in distal axons, 2) most retrograde neurofilaments in distal axons originate by reversal of anterograde filaments in the growth cone, 3) those anterograde filaments that do not reverse direction are recruited to form the neurofilament cytoskeleton of the newly forming axon, and 4) the net delivery of neurofilament polymers to growth cones may be controlled by regulating the reversal frequency.  相似文献   

8.
The adhesion of chick embryo sensory neurons to glass coverslips was examined with interference reflection optics. On untreated glass, adhesive contacts are common only beneath growth cones and are small. On polylysine-treated glass growth cones are highly spread, microspikes reach treat lengths and extensive adhesive contacts underlie growth cones, microspikes and nerve fibers. Veils, expanded from the growth cone, are adherent to the substratum either centrally or laterally, while the extending edge of the cell margin is non-adherent. Linear adhesions are frequent beneath microspikes and pass centrally beneath the growth cone margin. The distribution of linear adhesions resembles that of microfilament bundles seen within whole mounts of growth cones. Adhesive contacts stabilize extensions of the growth cone margin and may influence the organization of the microfilamentous network within the growth cone. Regulation of microfilament organization by adhesion may influence microfilament functions in growth cone mobility and the assembly of neurite structures.  相似文献   

9.
During development, growth cones direct growing axons into appropriate targets. However, in some cortical pathways target innervation occurs through the development of collateral branches that extend interstitially from the axon shaft. How do such branches form? Direct observations of living cortical brain slices revealed that growth cones of callosal axons pause for many hours beneath their cortical targets prior to the development of interstitial branches. High resolution imaging of dissociated living cortical neurons for many hours revealed that the growth cone demarcates sites of future axon branching by lengthy pausing behaviors and enlargement of the growth cone. After a new growth cone forms and resumes forward advance, filopodial and lamellipodial remnants of the large paused growth cone are left behind on the axon shaft from which interstitial branches later emerge. To investigate how the cytoskeleton reorganizes at axon branch points, we fluorescently labeled microtubules in living cortical neurons and imaged the behaviors of microtubules during new growth from the axon shaft and the growth cone. In both regions microtubules reorganize into a more plastic form by splaying apart and fragmenting. These shorter microtubules then invade newly developing branches with anterograde and retrograde movements. Although axon branching of dissociated cortical neurons occurs in the absence of targets, application of a target-derived growth factor, FGF-2, greatly enhances branching. Taken together, these results demonstrate that growth cone pausing is closely related to axon branching and suggest that common mechanisms underlie directed axon growth from the terminal growth cone and the axon shaft.  相似文献   

10.
Microtubule polymer assembly and transport during axonal elongation   总被引:15,自引:9,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
As axons elongate, tubulin, which is synthesized in the cell body, must be transported and assembled into new structures in the axon. The mechanism of transport and the location of assembly are presently unknown. We report here on the use of tubulin tagged with a photoactivatable fluorescent group to investigate these issues. Photoactivatable tubulin, microinjected into frog embryos at the two-cell stage, is incorporated into microtubules in neurons obtained from explants of the neural tube. When activated by light, a fluorescent mark is made on the microtubules in the axon, and transport and turnover can be visualized directly. We find that microtubules are generated in or near the cell body and continually transported distally as a coherent phase of polymer during axon elongation. This vectorial polymer movement was observed at all levels on the axon, even in the absence of axonal elongation. Measurements of the rate of polymer translocation at various places in the axon suggest that new polymer is formed by intercalary assembly along the axon and assembly at the growth cone in addition to transport of polymer from the cell body. Finally, polymer movement near the growth cone appeared to respond in a characteristic manner to growth cone behavior, while polymer proximally in the axon moved more consistently. These results suggest that microtubule translocation is the principal means of tubulin transport and that translocation plays an important role in generating new axon structure at the growth cone.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Fibres growing from neurons of explanted dorsal root ganglia from 10 day chick embryos were transected and subsequently observed by light and electron microscopy after periods of a few to fifty minutes. Changes immediately proximal and distal to the cut together with alterations further away from the site of injury on both sides of the cut were recorded. Observations were also made on the growth cones of damaged axons and on changes in associated glial cells.Reactive and degenerative changes including the rotation, retraction and swelling of cut axons occurred rapidly. Electron microscopy revealed tracts of filamentous material close to the sealed-off ends of axons, swollen organelles such as mitochondria, and lamellar bodies of varying dimensions.Proximal to the injury and closer to the expiant, damaged and degenerating axons mingled with normal processes. Many contained only a fine granular material, others clumps of organelles, particularly mitochondria.Distal to the cut, microspikes were lost from some growth cones. The dense granular material filling microspikes and growth cones remained unchanged. Clumps of large clear vesicles, lamellar bodies and swollen degenerating mitochondria were present, not only within growth cones, but also in all parts of the axon distal to the cut.Glial cells associated with transected axons soon developed an electron dense cytoplasm containing swollen organelles. Large numbers of vesicles filled with a particulate substance were also found.The possible significance of the changes observed after transection are considered and discussed.The author wishes to thank Prof. D.W. James in whose laboratory at University College London these studies were initiated, Dr. A.R. Lieberman for his expert help and advice and the University of London Central Research Fund and Wellcome Trust for financial assistance  相似文献   

12.
In olfactory systems, neuron-glia interactions have been implicated in the growth and guidance of olfactory receptor axons. In the moth Manduca sexta, developing olfactory receptor axons encounter several types of glia as they grow into the brain. Antennal nerve glia are born in the periphery and enwrap bundles of olfactory receptor axons in the antennal nerve. Although their peripheral origin and relationship with axon bundles suggest that they share features with mammalian olfactory ensheathing cells, the developmental roles of antennal nerve glia remain elusive. When cocultured with antennal nerve glial cells, olfactory receptor growth cones readily advance along glial processes without displaying prolonged changes in morphology. In turn, olfactory receptor axons induce antennal nerve glial cells to form multicellular arrays through proliferation and process extension. In contrast to antennal nerve glia, centrally derived glial cells from the axon sorting zone and antennal lobe never form arrays in vitro, and growth-cone glial-cell encounters with these cells halt axon elongation and cause permanent elaborations in growth cone morphology. We propose that antennal nerve glia play roles similar to olfactory ensheathing cells in supporting axon elongation, yet differ in their capacity to influence axon guidance, sorting, and targeting, roles that could be played by central olfactory glia in Manduca.  相似文献   

13.
Drebrin is a well-known side-binding protein of F-actin in the brain. Immunohistochemical data suggest that the peripheral parts of growing axons are enriched in the drebrin E isoform and mature axons are not. It has also been observed that drebrin E is concentrated in the growth cones of PC12 cells. These data strongly suggest that drebrin E plays a role in axonal growth during development. In this study, we used primary hippocampal neuronal cultures to analyze the role of drebrin E. Immunocytochemistry showed that within axonal growth cones drebrin E specifically localized to the transitional zone, an area in which dense networks of F-actins and microtubules overlapped. Over-expression of drebrin E caused drebrin E and F-actin to accumulate throughout the growth cone and facilitated axonal growth. In contrast, knockdown of drebrin E reduced drebrin E and F-actin in the growth cone and prevented axonal growth. Furthermore, inhibition of myosin II ATPase masked the promoting effects of drebrin E over-expression on axonal growth. These results suggest that drebrin E plays a role in axonal growth through actin–myosin interactions in the transitional zone of axonal growth cones.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution of leucine-3H in neurons was determined by electron-microscope radioautography after infusion of label into the spinal cord or sensory ganglia of regenerating newts. In the nerve cell bodies 3 days after infusion, the highest concentration of label per unit area occurred over the rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum. In the large brachial nerves, the silver grains were not distributed uniformly in the axoplasm, indicating that the labeled materials are restricted in their movement to certain regions of the axon. Almost all of the radioautographic grains observed in myelinated nerves could be accounted for by the presence of a uniformly labeled band occupying the area 1500–9000 A inside the axolemma. This region of the axon was rich in microtubules and organelles while the unlabeled central core of the axon contained mainly neurofilaments. This observation supports the hypothesis that microtubules are related to axonal transport. In small, vesicle-filled nerve terminals in the blastema, labeled material was restricted to a thin zone a short distance beneath the plasma membrane while the central region of the terminal was largely unlabeled. The peripheral pattern of labeling in the nerve endings is consistent with successive addition of newly synthesized proteins at the periphery of the growth cone and release of substances such as trophic factors at the nerve terminal.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of anterograde transport of alphaherpesviruses in axons remains controversial. This study examined the transport, assembly, and egress of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) in mid- and distal axons of infected explanted human fetal dorsal root ganglia using confocal microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) at 19, 24, and 48 h postinfection (p.i.). Confocal-microscopy studies showed that although capsid (VP5) and tegument (UL37) proteins were not uniformly present in axons until 24 h p.i., they colocalized with envelope (gG) proteins in axonal varicosities and in growth cones at 24 and 48 h p.i. TEM of longitudinal sections of axons in situ showed enveloped and unenveloped capsids in the axonal varicosities and growth cones, whereas in the midregion of the axons, predominantly unenveloped capsids were observed. Partially enveloped capsids, apparently budding into vesicles, were observed in axonal varicosities and growth cones, but not during viral attachment and entry into axons. Tegument proteins (VP22) were found associated with vesicles in growth cones, either alone or together with envelope (gD) proteins, by transmission immunoelectron microscopy. Extracellular virions were observed adjacent to axonal varicosities and growth cones, with some virions observed in crescent-shaped invaginations of the axonal plasma membrane, suggesting exit at these sites. These findings suggest that varicosities and growth cones are probable sites of HSV-1 envelopment of at least a proportion of virions in the mid- to distal axon. Envelopment probably occurs by budding of capsids into vesicles with associated tegument and envelope proteins. Virions appear to exit from these sites by exocytosis.  相似文献   

16.
Microtubule-associated-protein 1b (MAP1b) is abundant in neurons actively extending axons. MAP1b is present on microtubules throughout growing axons, but is preferentially concentrated on microtubule polymer in the distal axon and growth cone. Although MAP1b has been implicated in axon growth and pathfinding, its specific functions are not well understood. Biochemical and transfection studies suggest that MAP1b has microtubule-stabilizing activity, but recent studies with neurons genetically deficient in MAP1b have not confirmed this. We have explored MAP1b functions in growing sympathetic neurons using an acute inactivation approach. Neurons without axons were injected with polyclonal MAP1b antibodies and then stimulated to extend axons. Injected cells were compared to controls in terms of axon growth behavior and several properties of axonal microtubules. The injected antibodies rapidly and quantitatively sequestered MAP1b in the cell body, making it unavailable to perform its normal functions. This immunodepletion of MAP1b had no statistically significant effect on axon growth, the amount of microtubule polymer in the axon, and the relative tyrosinated tubulin content of this polymer, and this was true in sympathetic neurons from rat, wild type mice, and tau knockout mice. Thus, robust axon growth can occur in the absence of MAP1b alone or both MAP1b and tau. However, immunodepletion of MAP1b significantly increased the sensitivity of microtubules in the distal axon and growth cone to nocodazole-induced depolymerization. These results indicate that MAP1b has microtubule-stabilizing activity in growing axons. This stabilizing activity may be required for some axonal functions, but it is not necessary for axon growth.  相似文献   

17.
再生神经中微管,神经丝与轴突截面积的变化   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
用电镜及图象分析的方法研究了再生轴突中微管、神经丝与轴突截面积的变化,发现神经再生过程中微管及神经丝的密度增加,并与轴突截面积呈相关关系,而且微管的变化更早,更明显。由于微管参与了轴浆转运的机制,微管的增加提示其在神经再生中起了重要的作用。  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the role of the cell adhesion molecule NrCAM for axonal growth and pathfinding in the developing retina. Analysis of the distribution pattern of NrCAM in chick embryo retina sections and flat-mounts shows its presence during extension of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons; NrCAM is selectively present on RGC axons and is absent from the soma. Single cell cultures show an enrichment of NrCAM in the distal axon and growth cone. When offered as a substrate in addition to Laminin, NrCAM promotes RGC axon extension and the formation of growth cone protrusions. In substrate stripe assays, mimicking the NrCAM-displaying optic fibre layer and the Laminin-rich basal lamina, RGC axons preferentially grow on NrCAM lanes. The three-dimensional analysis of RGC growth cones in retina flat-mounts reveals that they are enlarged and form more protrusions extending away from the correct pathway under conditions of NrCAM-inhibition. Time-lapse analyses show that these growth cones pause longer to explore their environment, proceed for shorter time spans, and retract more often than under control conditions; in addition, they often deviate from the correct pathway towards the optic fissure. Inhibition of NrCAM in organ-cultured intact eyes causes RGC axons to misroute at the optic fissure; instead of diving into the optic nerve head, these axons cross onto the opposite side of the retina. Our results demonstrate a crucial role for NrCAM in the navigation of RGC axons in the developing retina towards the optic fissure, and also for pathfinding into the optic nerve.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Following transganglionic degenerative atrophy of primary afferent terminals induced by a crush-injury of the sciatic nerve, a regenerative process takes places in the upper dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord in the primate Macacus rhesus. Axonal growth cones are characterized by cisterns of axoplasmic reticulum; filopodia emanating from growth cones are electron-optically translucent sheet-like expansions, often containing growth-cone vesicles. Axoplasmic reticulum appears also in preterminal portions of regenerating axons. Dendritic growth cones contain a fine, filamentous matrix; electron-dense membrane specializations can be seen in well-defined areas of their surfaces. Immature synapses are formed between filopodia of axonal growth cones and dendritic growth cones. Electron-microscopic structures of this unique CNS regeneration are similar to those seen in the course of embryonic development of the spinal cord.  相似文献   

20.
In neurons, many receptors must be localized correctly to axons or dendrites for proper function. During development, receptors for nerve growth and guidance are targeted to axons and localized to growth cones where receptor activation by ligands results in promotion or inhibition of axon growth. Signaling outcomes downstream of ligand binding are determined by the location, levels and residence times of receptors on the neuronal plasma membrane. Therefore, the mechanisms controlling the trafficking of these receptors are crucial to the proper wiring of circuits. Membrane proteins accumulate on the axonal surface by multiple routes, including polarized sorting in the trans Golgi network, sorting in endosomes and removal by endocytosis. Endosomes also play important roles in the signaling pathways for both growth-promoting and -inhibiting molecules: signaling endosomes derived from endocytosis are important for signaling from growth cones to cell bodies. Growth-promoting neurotrophins and growth-inhibiting Nogo-A can use EHD4/Pincher-dependent endocytosis at the growth cone for their respective retrograde signaling. In addition to retrograde transport of endosomes, anterograde transport to axons in endosomes also occurs for several receptors, including the axon outgrowth-promoting cell adhesion molecule L1/NgCAM and TrkA. L1/NgCAM also depends on EHD4/Pincher-dependent endocytosis for its axonal polarization. In this review, we will focus on receptors whose trafficking has been reported to be modulated by the EHD4/Pincher family of endosomal regulators, namely L1/NgCAM, Trk and Nogo-A. We will first summarize the pathways underlying the axonal transport of these proteins and then discuss the potential roles of EHD4/Pincher in mediating their endocytosis.  相似文献   

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