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Development of the myoneural junction in the rat
Authors:H Teräväinen
Institution:(1) Department of Anatomy, University of Helsinki, Siltavuorenpenger 20, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:Summary The structure of the myoneural junction in the striated muscle of rat embryos and postnatal rats was studied by electron microscopy in order to assess at ultrastructural level the roles of neuronal and muscular elements and the sequence of events resulting in the formation of a functionally mature synaptic organization.From the observations it is concluded that the axon terminals enveloped by Schwann cells contain vesicles prior to apposition of the prospective synaptic membranes. Subsequently, subsarcolemmal thickening of the postsynaptic membrane takes place after the synaptic gap has been formed by disappearance of the teloglial cell from between the synaptic membranes but before the primary synaptic cleft in the strict sense is formed. Secondary synaptic clefts are formed later, when the primary synaptic cleft is regular in width, by local finger-like invaginations of the postsynaptic membrane, which thereafter expand basally, in a plane transverse to the axis of the axon terminal, to resemble flattened flasks. The junction is formed between multinucleated muscle cells and multiple axons, which at first lie side by side and later, when formation of adult-type secondary synaptic clefts is in progress, become separated by folds of the sarcoplasm and the teloglia. In extraocular muscles of adult rats the sarcoplasmic reticulum is closely associated with the postjunctional sarcoplasm.In the light of earlier observations on the development of contractibility after nerve stimulation, cholinesterase histochemistry and muscle fibre physiology, these observations are interpreted to indicate that functional differentiation of the myoneural synapse results from induction by the motor axon and that the association of the sarcoplasmic reticulum with the postjunctional sarcoplasm in adult extraocular muscles is related to modified fibre physiology.The author wishes to thank Prof. Antti Telkkä, M.D., Head of the Electron Microscope Laboratory, University of Helsinki, for placing the electron microscopic facilities at his disposal.
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