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1.
Morphometric analysis of the developing mouse soleus muscle   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The pattern of organogenesis of the soleus muscle of the 129 ReJ mouse was evaluated quantitatively using spaced, serial, ultrathin sections and computer-assisted morphometric analysis. Muscles from 14-, 16-, and 18-day in utero mice and muscles of 1- and 5-day-old mice were analyzed to determine age-related alterations in the maximal girth and length of the muscle, number of myotubes, cluster frequency, and the lengths and diameters of myotubes. Primary myotubes are found in the muscle at 14 days in utero. There is little de novo myotube formation between 14 and 16 days in utero, this interval being principally one of primary myotube growth and maturation. The interval between 16 and 18 days in utero is marked by extensive secondary myotube formation, with more myotubes being formed during this period than in any period studied. Morphometric data support the hypothesis that secondary generation myotubes use primary myotubes as a scaffold on which they are formed. Morphometric data also confirm the hypothesis that cluster formation and cluster dispersal occur concurrently during the prenatal period. Secondary myotubes continue to form until birth. At birth, the soleus muscle contains the adult number of myofibers. The first 5 days postnatally are marked by myofiber growth and maturation.  相似文献   

2.
The organogenesis of the soleus muscle of the 129 ReJ mouse (a mixed muscle, which in the adult contains approximately equal numbers of slow-twitch oxidative and fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic myofibers) was studied in spaced, serial transverse, and longitudinal sections of muscles of 14-, 16-, and 18-day in utero and 1- and 5-day postnatal mice. A discrete soleus muscle was distinguished by 14 days in utero. It consisted of groups of closely apposed primary myotubes displaying junctional complexes and a pleomorphic population of mononucleated cells. Between 14 and 16 days in utero there was little de novo myotube formation. At 16 days in utero, basal lamina surrounded groups of primary myotubes; and primitive motor endplates were found on these myotubes. At 18 days in utero, the basal-lamina-enclosed groups of primary myotubes were no longer present. At this stage, basal lamina surrounded clusters (consisting of one primary myotube and one or more secondary myotubes) or independent myotubes (single myotubes surrounded by their own basal lamina). Cluster formation and cluster dispersal occurred concurrently, beginning at 18 days in utero and extending until birth. At birth, there was still a substantial population of immature, secondary myotubes that interdigitated with larger, more mature primary myofibers. At this stage, intermuscular axons had begun to myelinate, and postsynaptic specialization of the motor endplates had begun. Cluster dispersal and myonuclear migration was completed during the first 5 days postnatally with the muscle taking on adult characteristics. Beginning at 16 days in utero and extending into the neonatal period, there was evidence of myotube death in the soleus muscle.  相似文献   

3.
The organogenesis of murine striated muscle: a cytoarchitectural study   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The ultrastructure and the three-dimensional cytoarchitecture of the developing murine extensor digitorum longus muscle has been studied in spaced, serial, transverse and longitudinal ultrathin sections of the muscles of 12-, 14-, 16-, and 18-day in utero, newborn, and 5-day-old 129 ReJ mice. Despite the fact that in vivo myogenesis is asynchronous (i.e., during most of the fetal period, multiple stages of myogenesis can be seen in a single developing muscle mass), a distinct temporal pattern of development can be seen across the entire width and length of the developing muscle. At 12 days in utero, the developing extensor digitorum longus muscle consists of primary myotubes surrounded by a pleomorphic population of mononucleated cells devoid of myofilaments. At this stage, blood vessels and nerves are found peripheral to but not within the developing muscle mass. A delay of 2 days occurs between the time of formation of the primary and secondary myotubes. Clusters (consisting of one primary myotube and secondary myotubes), axon bundles, capillaries, and primitive motor endplates are found in the muscle by 16 days in utero. Evidence is presented consistent with the hypothesis that cluster formation and cluster dispersal occur simultaneously in the developing muscle, beginning as early as 16-days in utero. By 18 days in utero, many of the primary myotubes of the cluster and the independent myotubes (i.e., single myotubes enclosed in their own basal lamina) have begun to acquire the polygonal shape, fascicular arrangement, and ultrastructure characteristic of more mature myofibers. At birth, clusters are infrequently encountered, and intramuscular axons have begun to undergo myelination. At this time, the only undifferentiated, mononucleated cells present in the muscle are myosatellite cells. The first week postnatal was characterized by further maturation of the myofibers.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
Formation of primary and secondary myotubes in rat lumbrical muscles   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Numbers of myoblasts, primary myotubes and secondary myotubes in developing rat embryo hindlimb IVth lumbrical muscles were counted at daily intervals up until the time of birth, using electron microscopy. Motoneurone death at the spinal cord level supplying the lumbricals was assessed by counting axons in the 4th lumbar ventral root. Death of the motoneurones that supply the intrinsic muscles of the hindfoot was monitored by comparing the timecourse of development of total muscle choline acetyltransferase activity in control embryos with that in embryos where motoneurone death was inhibited by chronic paralysis with TTX, and by counting axons in the mixed nerve trunks at the level of the ankle at daily intervals. Condensations of undifferentiated cells marking the site of formation of the muscle were seen on embryonic day 15 (E15). Primary myotubes began to appear on E16 and reached a stable number (102 +/- 4) by E17. Secondary myotubes first appeared two days later, on E19, and numbered 280 at the time of birth (E22). The adult total of about 1000 muscle fibres, derived from both primary and secondary myotubes, was reached at postnatal day 7 (PN7) so considerable generation of secondary myotubes occurred after birth. There was a linear correlation between the number of undifferentiated mononucleate cells in a muscle and the rate of formation of secondary myotubes. The major period of motoneurone death in lumbar spinal cord was during E16-E17, when axon numbers in the L4 ventral root fell from 12,000 to 4000, but a discontinuity in the curve of muscle ChAT activity versus time indicated that death in the lumbrical motor pool occurred during E17-E19, after all primary myotubes had formed and before generation of secondary myotubes began. We suggest that motoneurone death, by regulating the final size of the motoneurone pool, regulates the ratio of secondary to primary myotube numbers in a muscle.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
9.
Development of chicken breast muscle is characterized by the sequential appearance of six electrophoretically distinct myosin heavy chain (HC) isoforms. Cultured secondary myotubes, derived from 12-day embryonic chick breast muscle, mainly express the early embryonic HC isoform HCemb/e, normally present in 8-day embryonic breast muscle, and the two fast light chain isoforms LC1f and LC2f. Direct low-frequency (2.5 Hz) stimulation of these myotubes via platinum electrodes leads to a shift in myosin HC expression with increases in the late embryonic HC isoform HCemb/l amounting to 35% of total HC in 19-day-stimulated cultures. Measurements of 35S-methionine incorporation and immunohistochemical analyses demonstrate increases in LC3f. This increase is also seen at the mRNA level. These results indicate that induced contractile activity promotes myotube maturation in vitro. The observation that chronic stimulation enhances the expression of the slow isoform LC2s at the RNA, as well as the protein level, suggests an additional effect consisting of a fast-to-slow change in phenotype expression. In view of the fact that muscle maturation and phenotype expression is under neural control during development in vivo, our results on directly stimulated, aneural myotubes indicate that neurally transmitted contractile activity may be an important factor in modulating phenotype expression of secondary myotubes.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
12.
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   

13.
The emergence of avian satellite cells during development has been studied using markers that distinguish adult from fetal cells. Previous studies by us have shown that myogenic cultures from fetal (Embryonic Day 10) and adult 12-16 weeks) chicken pectoralis muscle (PM) each regulate expression of the embryonic isoform of fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) differently. In fetal cultures, embryonic MHC is coexpressed with a ventricular MHC in both myocytes (differentiated myoblasts) and myotubes. In contrast, myocytes and newly formed myotubes in adult cultures express ventricular but not embryonic MHC. In the current study, the appearance of myocytes and myotubes which express ventricular but not embryonic MHC was used to determine when adult myoblasts first emerge during avian development. By examining patterns of MHC expression in mass and clonal cultures prepared from embryonic and posthatch chicken skeletal muscle using double-label immunofluorescence with isoform-specific monoclonal antibodies, we show that a significant number of myocytes and myotubes which stain for ventricular but not embryonic MHC are first seen in cultures derived from PM during fetal development (Embryonic Day 18) and comprise the majority, if not all, of the myoblasts present at hatching and beyond. These results suggest that adult type myoblasts become dominant in late embryogenesis. We also show that satellite cell cultures derived from adult slow muscle give results similar to those of cultures derived from adult fast muscle. Cultures derived from Embryonic Day 10 hindlimb form myocytes and myotubes that coexpress ventricular and embryonic MHCs in a manner similar to cells of the Embryonic Day 10 PM. Thus, adult and fetal expression patterns of ventricular and embryonic MHCs are correlated with developmental age but not muscle fiber type.  相似文献   

14.
The enzymatic activity of two lysosomal enzymes, acid phosphatase and cathepsin D, was determined in fetus and during post-natal development of the rat gastrocnemius muscle in comparison to the histological differentiation of this muscle. The specific activity of cathepsin D and acid phosphatase was 7 and 2.5 fold higher in the muscle during development until 20 days after birth, than that of mature muscle, respectively. A trend of gradual decrease in the activity of these enzymes was observed concomitantly with the differentiation and maturation of the muscle from mononucleated cells in the fetus to myotubes formation at day 1 after birth, followed by the formation of "young" and then striated myofibers in 10- and 20-day old neonates, respectively. However, no correlation could be found between the lysosomal enzyme activity and the developmental stages of the muscle until 20 days after birth. It is suggested that the elevated activity of lysosomal acid hydrolases may be associated with late developmental processes from young to mature myofibers in normal skeletal muscle and not only in various pathological conditions.  相似文献   

15.
N-RAP alternative splicing and protein localization were studied in developing skeletal muscle tissue from pre- and postnatal mice and in fusing primary myotubes in culture. Messages encoding N-RAP-s and N-RAP-c, the predominant isoforms of N-RAP detected in adult skeletal muscle and heart, respectively, were present in a 5:1 ratio in skeletal muscle isolated from E16.5 embryos. N-RAP-s mRNA levels increased three-fold over the first 3 weeks of postnatal development, while N-RAP-c mRNA levels remained low. N-RAP alternative splicing during myotube differentiation in culture was similar to the pattern observed in embryonic and neonatal muscle, with N-RAP-s expression increasing and N-RAP-c mRNA levels remaining low. In both developing skeletal muscle and cultured myotubes, N-RAP protein was primarily associated with developing myofibrillar structures containing alpha-actinin, but was not present in mature myofibrils. The results establish that N-RAP-s is the predominant spliced form of N-RAP present throughout skeletal muscle development.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Summary The development of muscle spindles, with respect to the expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms was studied in rat hind limbs from 17 days of gestation up to seven days after birth. Serial cross-sections were labelled with antibodies against slow tonic, slow twitch and neonatal isomyosins, myomesin, laminin and neurofilament protein.At 17–18 days of gestation, a small population of primary myotubes expressing slow tonic myosin were identified as the earliest spindle primordia. These myotubes also expressed slow twitch and, to a lesser extent, neonatal myosin. At 19–20 days of gestation a second myotube became apparent; this staining strongly with anti-neonatal myosin. A day later this secondary myotube acquired reactivity to anti-slow tonic and anti-slow twitch myosins. By birth, a third myotube was present; this staining strongly with anti-neonatal myosin but otherwise unreactive with the other antibodies against myosin heavy chains. Three days after birth a fourth myotube, with identical reactivity to the third one, became apparent. Regional variation in the expression of isomyosins, which was present since birth in the two nuclear bag fibers was further enhanced: the nuclear bag2 staining strongly with anti-slow tonic and antineonatal in the equatorial region and with decreasing intensity towards the poles, whilst with anti-slow twitch the stainability was low in the equatorial and high in the polar region. The nuclear bag1 fiber showed a homogeneous staining: high with anti-slow tonic, moderate with anti-neonatal, and displayed stainability to antislow twitch myosin in the polar regions only. No regional variation was found along the chain fiber/myotube. At seven days after birth, the pattern of reactivity was similar to that found in the adult spindles, except for the bag1 fiber which still expressed neonatal myosin.We show that slow tonic myosin is expressed from early development and it is a reliable marker of developing bag fibers. We suggest that muscle spindles are formed from special cell lineages of which the primary generation myotubes expressing slow tonic myosin represent the primordium of muscle spindles.  相似文献   

18.
We describe the expression and distribution patterns of nestin, desmin and vimentin in intact and regenerating muscle spindles of the rat hind limb skeletal muscles. Regeneration was induced by intramuscular isotransplantation of extensor digitorum longus (EDL) or soleus muscles from 15-day-old rats into the EDL muscle of adult female inbred Lewis rats. The host muscles with grafts were excised after 7-, 16-, 21- and 29-day survival and immunohistochemically stained. Nestin expression in intact spindles in host muscles was restricted to Schwann cells of sensory and motor nerves. In transplanted muscles, however, nestin expression was also found in regenerating “spindle fibers”, 7 and 16 days after grafting. From the 21st day onwards, the regenerated spindle fibers were devoid of nestin immunoreactivity. Desmin was detected in spindle fibers at all developmental stages in regenerating as well as in intact spindles. Vimentin was expressed in cells of the outer and inner capsules of all muscle spindles and in newly formed myoblasts and myotubes of regenerating spindles 7 days after grafting. Our results show that the expression pattern of these intermediate filaments in regenerating spindle fibers corresponds to that found in regenerating extrafusal fibers, which supports our earlier suggestion that they resemble small-diameter extrafusal fibers.  相似文献   

19.
The histogenesis of rat intercostal muscle   总被引:2,自引:17,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Intercostal muscle from fetal and newborn rats was examined with the electron microscope. At 16 days' gestation, the developing muscle was composed of primary generations of myotubes, many of which were clustered together in groups. Within these groups, the membranes of neighboring myotubes were interconnected by specialized junctions, including tight junctions. Morphologically undifferentiated cells surrounded the muscle groups, frequently extended pseudopodia along the interspace between adjacent myotubes, and appeared to separate neighboring myotubes from one another. At 18 and 20 days' gestation, the muscle was also composed of groups of cells but the structure of the groups differed from that of the groups observed at 16 days. Single, well differentiated myotubes containing much central glycogen and peripheral myofibrils dominated each group. These large cells were interpreted as primary myotubes. Small, less differentiated muscle cells and undifferentiated cells clustered around their walls. Each cluster was ensheated by a basal lamina. The small cells were interpreted as primordia of new generations of muscle cells which differentiated by appositional growth along the walls of the large primary myotubes. All generations of rat intercostal muscle cells matured to myofibers between 20 days' gestation and birth. Coincidentally, large and small myofibers diverged from each other, leading to disintegration of the groups of muscle cells. Undifferentiated cells frequently occurred in the interspaces between neighboring muscle cells at the time of separation. Myofibers arising at different stages of muscle histogenesis intermingled in a checkerboard fashion as a result of this asynchronous mode of development. The possibility of fusion between neighboring muscle cells in this developing system is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Role of nerve and muscle factors in the development of rat muscle spindles   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The soleus muscles of fetal rats were examined by electron microscopy to determine whether the early differentiation of muscle spindles is dependent upon sensory innervation, motor innervation, or both. Simple unencapsulated afferent-muscle contacts were observed on the primary myotubes at 17 and 18 days of gestation. Spindles, encapsulations of muscle fibers innervated by afferents, could be recognized early on day 18 of gestation. The full complement of spindles in the soleus muscle was present at day 19, in the region of the neuromuscular hilum. More afferents innervated spindles at days 18 and 19 of gestation than at subsequent developmental stages, or in adult rats; hence, competition for available myotubes may exist among afferents early in development. Some of the myotubes that gave rise to the first intrafusal (bag2) fiber had been innervated by skeletomotor (alpha) axons prior to their incorporation into spindles. However, encapsulated intrafusal fibers received no motor innervation until fusimotor (gamma) axons innervated spindles 3 days after the arrival of afferents and formation of spindles, at day 20. The second (bag1) intrafusal fiber was already formed when gamma axons arrived. Thus, the assembly of bag1 and bag2 intrafusal fibers occurs in the presence of sensory but not gamma motor innervation. However, transient innervation of future bag2 fibers by alpha axons suggests that both sensory and alpha motor neurons may influence the initial stages of bag2 fiber assembly. The confinement of nascent spindles to a localized region of the developing muscle and the limited number of spindles in developing muscles in spite of an abundance of afferents raise the possibility that afferents interact with a special population of undifferentiated myotubes to form intrafusal fibers.  相似文献   

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